In 1804, when she was 5 years old, Mary Anning began to dig in the cliffs that flanked her English seaside town. What she found amazed the scientists of her time and challenged the established view of world history. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll tell the story of "the greatest fossilist the world ever knew.” We'll also try to identify a Norwegian commando and puzzle over some further string pulling. Show notes Please support us on Patreon!
Thursday, 14 June 2018
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
You know what works better than giving tax-credits to property developers, or mandating a few poor-door accessible affordable housing unit...
-
Facebook tried to get hospitals to share "anonymized data" on patients with it, including conditions and prescriptions , for a ...
-
Brett Kavanaugh is a name that leaves a bad taste in many mouths, but the name is now being put to good use with BrettKavanaugh.com (or .org...
-
In this video, bodycam footage shows a young man in jeans and a vaguely authoritarian shirt leaning into a driver's window. The bodycam...
-
Cryptocurrencies and Tor hidden services ushered in a new golden age for markets in illegal goods, especially banned or circumscribed drugs:...
-
A British company named "<SCRIPT SRC=HTTPS://MJT.XSS.HTLTD" was ordered to change its name after regulators realized what was f...
-
In This video, professional skeptic James Randi demonstrates his new powder (called tal-kom or something like that) that demagnetizes a mag...
-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp7ooQ_7TPg My friends in The Afghan Whigs released a stunningly weird and and dark new video for their tr...
-
It's highly unusual for a squirrel to purposely jump on a human. And it's even more unusual for said human to roll with it, without...
Powered by Blogger.