HistoryP.T. Barnum led 21 elephants - including the famous Jumbo - across the Brooklyn Bridge to prove it was safe. Six days after it opened in 1883, a stampede rumor sparked a panic that left 12 people dead and shattered public confidence. The elephant parade fixed it. It worked.1 hour ago
AnimalsAn octopus is less an animal than a separate experiment in intelligence. It has 3 hearts, blue blood (copper-based, not iron), and around 500 million neurons - as many as a dog - but most of them sit in its 8 arms, which can taste, decide, and act on their own. Scientists treat it as the closest thing to alien biology on Earth, and it can even edit its own RNA. When it jet-swims, its main heart stops beating.2 hours ago
TrendingHistoryJean-Pierre Osenat was doing a routine appraisal of a Paris townhouse when he noticed a painting on the wall. It turned out to be a Rubens masterpiece - a 1613 work called Christ on the Cross that had vanished for over 400 years, known to the art world only through engravings. Authenticated by microscopic paint analysis, it sold for $2.7 million.5 hours ago
TrendingHistoryStonehenge was privately owned until 1918. A barrister named Cecil Chubb bought it at a Salisbury auction in 1915 for £6,600 - by some accounts because he got carried away while there to buy dining chairs. Three years later he gave it to the British nation. The government made him a baronet.19 hours ago
PlacesLake Natron in Tanzania is so alkaline (pH up to 10.5) and hot (up to 60°C / 140°F) that animals that die in it get preserved and coated in mineral salts - their calcified carcasses inspired Nick Brandt’s famous posed-statue photos. The twist: this same caustic lake is where 75% of the world’s lesser flamingos are born. The soda flats and toxic water keep predators out, making it the safest nursery on Earth.22 hours ago
TrendingScienceHubble launched in 1990 with a $1.5 billion price tag - and a mirror ground to the wrong shape. The error was just 2 microns off, about 1/50th the width of a human hair, but enough to leave the telescope nearly blind. NASA became a late-night punchline. In December 1993, astronauts spent 35 hours across five spacewalks installing corrective optics in orbit. The images that came back were perfect.1 day ago
HistoryGustave Eiffel built a secret apartment at the top of his tower - 906 feet above Paris - with a piano, sitting room, and three small desks for science. Paris's wealthy offered him fortunes to rent it for a single night. He refused every offer. On September 10, 1889, Thomas Edison climbed up and gifted him a phonograph. The apartment still exists, with wax figures of Eiffel, Edison, and his daughter Claire inside.1 day ago
TrendingAnimalsTahlequah is a wild orca off Seattle. In 2018, her newborn calf died. She refused to let the body sink. She carried it on her head for 17 days and nearly 1,000 miles. Scientists called it a Tour of Grief. Seven years later, she lost another calf. She carried that one for at least 11 days too. She loved deeply enough to grieve like this twice.1 day ago
AnimalsA jellyfish no wider than a fingernail cannot die of old age. When Turritopsis dohrnii gets old, starving, or injured, its adult cells transform and it shrinks back into a polyp - the larval stage it grew from years earlier. Then it grows up all over again, and can repeat the loop indefinitely. That makes it biologically immortal. Scientists only noticed in the 1990s, when aging adults kept reverting in their tanks instead of dying.1 day ago
TrendingScienceLee Berger found 1,550 fossils of an unknown human species in South Africa's Rising Star cave. The only way in was an 18-cm gap. He couldn't fit. He posted on Facebook for scientists slim enough to squeeze through. Six women answered. They crawled in and pulled out Homo naledi - a lost branch of humanity. Eight years later, Berger lost 25 kg and finally made it in himself.561 day ago
AnimalsThe wombat is the only animal on Earth that poops in cubes - 80 to 100 neat, flat-sided blocks every night. For years nobody knew how; everyone assumed a square exit. There isn't one. Engineer Patricia Yang mapped a wombat's intestines and found two stretchy groove regions where the gut wall flexes unevenly, moulding the waste into cubes. The wombat then stacks them to mark territory - and cubes don't roll away.1 day ago
HistoryCleopatra lived closer in time to the 1969 Moon landing than to the building of the Great Pyramid (around 2560 BC). The pyramids were already about 2,500 years old in her lifetime.1 day ago