NEWS Wallowa County Chieftain A6 Wednesday, July 3, 2019 Staying safe in the sun includes more than sunscreen W e have all been encour- aged to apply sunscreen products to ourselves and family members before sig- nifi cant sun exposure. Protection from the sun’s UV rays is import- ant to help prevent some skin can- cers. But have you ever read the ingredients on your sunscreen bot- tle? You will likely fi nd one or more of the following ingredients: avobenzone, oxybenzone, ecam- sule, and octocrylene. It has been known since the 1990s that these ingredients are absorbed into the bloodstream, but the long term effects are still unknown. There is concern that some of these chem- icals may cause endocrine, repro- ductive, developmental and can- cer-related problems. In February MOUNTAIN MEDICINE Annika Maly of this year, the FDA announced that it is creating a new set of rules and regulations around sunscreens which will be released in Novem- ber 2019. The lack of safety informa- tion regarding common sunscreen products was highlighted in a May 2019 article in The Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers enrolled 24 adults who applied the recommended amount of sunscreen (spray, lotion and creams) to 75% of their exposed skin four times a day. Research- ers then measured the levels of sunscreen chemicals in the blood every day for seven days. The rec- ommended distribution of sun- screen is equivalent to a quarter teaspoon applied to one’s face. The current FDA recommended blood level for these chemicals is less than 0.5 nanogram per mil- liliter (ng/mL). After one day of application, regardless of the type of sunscreen, blood levels for all the ingredients were over 1ng/mL. Oxybenzone levels were the high- est at 34.4 ng/mL after 7 days of using sunscreen spray. Overall, the blood levels of the chemicals far exceeded the recommended con- centration. While this was a small study, it does raise important ques- tions about the safety of these products. The FDA uses the term “gener- ally regarded as safe and effective” or “GRASE” to designate product safety. Only zinc and titanium are designated as “GRASE” for sun protectants at this time. Zinc and titanium are larger molecules that stay on the surface of the skin and do not absorb into the bloodstream. There are 12 other common chem- icals in sunscreens, including those in the study above, that are now under the designation of “insuffi - cient evidence of GRASE.” PABA and trolamine are rarely seen on the shelves anymore, and they are considered “not GRASE.” Protection from the sun’s harm- ful UV rays continues to be para- mount. There is not enough research at this point to make a conclusion on the long term safety of these products. There will be more to come about the safety of sunscreen and different sunscreen products in the future. Note that many of these chemicals can be found in chap- sticks, cosmetics and lotions. In the meantime, avoidance of sun during the hours of 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., shade, clothing, and zinc and tita- nium sunscreens are the safest ways to go. See you at the beach! Mountain Medicine is edited by Ron Polk, Emeritus Professor (retired), Virginia Commonwealth University, and Kelsey Allen, D.O.,- Family Medicine, Mountain View Medical Clinic. NASA will send quadracopter to Titan to search for methane sources NASA Paul Voosen The siren call of Titan could not be ignored. NASA’s next billion-dol- lar mission, called Drag- onfl y, will be an innovative quadcopter to explore Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, the agency announced today. The craft will soar and hover over the icy moon’s surface—and land on it—in a search for the conditions and chemistry that could foster life. The mission—led by Elizabeth “Zibi” Turtle, a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins Univer- sity Applied Physics Lab- oratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and also man- aged by APL—will launch in 2026. It represents a cal- culated risk for the agency, embracing a new paradigm of robotic exploration to be used on a distant moon. “Titan is unlike any other place in the solar system, and Dragonfl y is like no other mission,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s asso- ciate administrator for sci- ence in Washington, D.C., while announcing the mis- sion’s selection. “The sci- ence is compelling. It’s the right time to do it.” Titan is veiled by a nitro- gen atmosphere and larger than Mercury. It is thought to harbor a liquid ocean beneath its frozen crust of water ice. NASA’s Cas- sini spacecraft studied Titan during its historic campaign, and, in 2005, dropped the short-lived Huygens probe into Titan’s atmosphere. The surface it saw had many geologic features sim- ilar to those found on Earth, including plateaus, dune- NASA The quadracopter that NASA is designing for Titan, Saturn’s methane-burping moon, would be far more agile than that Mars Rovers. fi lled deserts, and, at its poles, liquid seas and rivers. But on Titan, where tem- peratures average a frigid 94 K, the “rocks” are made T HE B OOKLOFT of water ice and the seas are fi lled with ethane and meth- ane, hydrocarbons that are gases on Earth. The moon’s stew of organic molecules and water, many scientists believe, could have resulted in reactions to create amino acids and the bases used to build DNA’s double helix. It’s as if Titan has been con- ducting experiments on life formation for millions of years, Turtle says. “Dragon- fl y is designed to go pick up the results of those experi- ments and study them.” Dragonfl y is an inspir- AND Skylight Gallery Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Church Directory Church of Christ Grace Lutheran Church 502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa 541-398-2509 409 West Main -Enterprise SUNDAY WORSHIP at 9am Worship at 11 a.m. Mid-week Bible Study 7 p.m. St. Katherine’s Catholic Church Fr. Thomas Puduppulliparamban 301 E. Garfield Enterprise Mass Schedule Sundays: St. Pius X, Wallowa - 8:00 am St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 10:30am Saturdays: St Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 5:30am Weekday: St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise – 8:00am (Monday – Thursday and First Friday) Mission Project: “Bag It for School” School clothes for Foster Children phone (message): 541-426-4633 web: gracelutheranenterprise.com ing selection, adds Lindy Elkins-Tanton, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University in Tempe and principal investigator of Psyche, NASA’s mission to a metallic asteroid. “Titan might truly be the cradle for some kind of life—and whether life has emerged or not, Titan’s hydrocar- bon rivers and lakes, and its hydrocarbon snow, makes it one of the most fantasy- like landscapes in our solar system.” Given Titan’s complex surface, a lander at a sin- gle site would not be able to say much about the moon’s chemistry. Dragonfl y lever- ages the advances in com- puting and aircraft design that have led to the explo- sion of hovering drones on Earth. It will carry eight rotor blades, on the top and bottom of each of four arms. It is, in effect, a movable lander, capable of shunting kilometers between sam- pling sites every 16 Earth days. Titan’s dense air and low gravity will allow the 300-kilogram, sedan-size copter, which will be pow- ered by a radioactive gener- ator, to hover with 38 times less power than needed on Earth. Rock the Rodeo & Festival Season! Boots Blazers Dresses Bags Graphic T-Shirt’s St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise NE 3rd & Main St 541-426-3439 Worship Service Sunday 9:30am All are welcome CLUES ACROSS 1. Wineglass part 5. Equal 9. Resort for dieters 12. Bubbly beverage 13. Old stringed instrument 14. Road diagram 15. Tentacles 16. Slangy assent 17. Perfect serve 18. Better than better 19. Closed, as an envelope 21. Decreases 25. Cobbler’s punch 26. Refuge 29. Marsh grasses 32. Paddle’s cousin 33. Residue 35. Baltic or Red ____ 36. Doodles 38. Made into law 40. Janitor’s implement 41. Dilly 42. Slender candles 45. Break sharply 49. House shape 50. Side of New York 53. Nero’s garment 54. Breakfasted 55. Off yonder 56. Wallet fillers 57. In fashion 58. Wet with morning droplets 59. Forest-floor plant CLUES DOWN 1. Wound cover 2. Rushed 3. “Desire Under the ____” 4. Learn well 5. Tissue layer 6. Needle’s hole 7. Memorable periods 8. Play practice 9. Littlest 10. Swiftness 11. Acted like 20. Fear 22. Comforter 23. Piece of soap 24. Pittsburgh product 26. Reel holder 27. Cauliflower ____ 28. Crushed 30. Cee’s follower 31. Heartbreaking 34. Large antelope 37. Unhappiness 39. Habit 42. Atlanta Braves, e.g. 43. Low female voice 44. Out of danger 46. “____, Nanette”: 2 wds. 47. Gets older 48. Lapse 51. Cutting tool 52. Go for it Joseph United Methodist Church Summit Church 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth Phone: 541-432-3102 Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am Gospel Centered Community Service time: 10:30 am Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise 541-426-2150 Interim Pastor: Rich Hagenbaugh JosephUMC.org www.summitchurchoregon.org Enterprise Christian Church Christ Covenant Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Pastor Terry Tollefson Worship at 9 a.m. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship at 6 p.m. (nursery at A.M. services) Family Prayer: 9:30 AM Sunday School: 10 AM Worship Service: 11 AM “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister 723 College Street Lostine Lostine Presbyterian Church Enterprise Community Congregational Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM The Big Brown Church Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 702 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:am Worship Service • 10:am Pastor Tim Barton Visit Us on with an open door Pastor Archie Hook Sunday Worship 11am Bible Study 9:30am Ark Angels Children’s Program Ages 4-6th grade, 11am Nursery for children 3 & under 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044 Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Worship Services Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Pastor Jonathan DeWeber Closed Monday & Tuesday TRY OUR GLUTEN FREE CRUST! THE TROLLEY A unique experience in travel & taste. Cheese topped by asparagus spears, artichoke hearts and spinach. THE BEACH The taste of a BBQ on the beach (sand not included) with onions, green peppers & marinated BBQ chicken with our special sauce. THE RIO GRANDE The taste of the southwest featuring whole green chilies and spicy chicken in a chili verde sauce topped with Open Memorial fresh tomatoes & served w/a Day to Day side of Labor sour cream. 7 Days A Week