The Man Who Built the First Modern Gym Machines
In an era when physical activity was still tied to labor, one Swedish doctor began reimagining exercise not as toil, but as science.
The Man Who Built the First Modern Gym Machines Read More »
In an era when physical activity was still tied to labor, one Swedish doctor began reimagining exercise not as toil, but as science.
The Man Who Built the First Modern Gym Machines Read More »
In January 2020, as news of a novel coronavirus spread from Wuhan, users on the imageboard site 4chan created an anthropomorphized version of the virus named “Corona-chan.”
Corona-chan: When a Global Pandemic Became an Internet Character Read More »
In 1932, Australia faced an agricultural crisis unlike any before. On the wheat farms of Western Australia, more than 20,000 emus began invading newly cleared farmland, damaging crops and breaking fences.
Australia’s Emu War: When Soldiers Battled Birds Read More »
In December 2015, Beijing issued a red alert, shuttering schools and restricting cars as pollution soared to ten times the WHO’s recommended limit. But this wasn’t new.
A History Written in Smoke: The 2,000-Year Struggle with Dirty Air Read More »
On June 4, 1913, a woman stepped onto the track during the Epsom Derby, one of Britain’s most prestigious horse races. As King George V’s horse, Anmer, galloped toward the finish line, she moved into its path.
The Woman Who Stepped Into History Read More »
At exactly 03:14:08 UTC on 19 January 2038, some computers will attempt to take one small step forward in time—and leap 136 years backward instead.
The Countdown to 2038: When Time Breaks for 32-Bit Systems Read More »
In the final years of World War II, a group of British prisoners of war inside Colditz Castle—Germany’s supposedly escape-proof Oflag IV-C camp—began secretly building a glider.
The Colditz Cock: The Secret Glider Built to Escape a Nazi Prison Read More »
In the early 1800s, a cow named Craven Heifer drew enormous crowds not for what she did, but for the sheer scale of what she was.
The Cow That Stopped Traffic: The Story of Craven Heifer Read More »
In the Russian city of Tolyatti, best known for its massive AvtoVAZ car factory, one of the largest auto plants in the world, an unexpected sight draws visitors: a 90-meter-long Tango-class submarine sitting inland, far from any sea.
A Submarine in the Steppe: Inside Tolyatti’s Open-Air Museum of Machines Read More »
The Teacher in Orbit On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart just 73 seconds after launch, killing all seven crew members, including Christa McAuliffe, a 37-year-old high school teacher from New Hampshire. McAuliffe had been chosen from over 11,000 applicants to be the first civilian in space under NASA’s Teacher in Space
When Civilians Almost Went to Space Read More »