The Nuclear Flask Train Crash Test

Aug 21, 2024

Nuclear reactors in power stations use fissile radioactive isotopes to produce heat, which powers turbines to generate electricity. When the...

4 Odd Events That Appeared At The Olympics

Aug 19, 2024

Since the inception of the modern Olympic Games in 1896, this global sporting event has continuously evolved, introducing fresh and dynamic ...

5 Airline Crashes Resulting from Tomfoolery

Aug 12, 2024

Aviation is an industry that thrives on precision, discipline, and adherence to strict protocols. However, there have been tragic instances ...

Inês de Castro: Portugal’s Posthumous Queen

Aug 6, 2024

In European history, few love stories are as poignant and politically charged as that of Inês de Castro and King Pedro I of Portugal. Their ...

Prokop Diviš And The Lightning Rod

Jul 30, 2024

In 1754, Prokop Diviš, a Czech priest, attempted to control the weather but ended up inventing the lightning rod instead. Diviš was a past...

A Short History of Supernova Observations

Jul 25, 2024

The Betelgeuse in the constellation of Orion is a fascinating star. It’s a red supergiant more than six hundred times the diameter of the Su...

The Largest Man-Made, Non-Nuclear Explosion in History

Jul 16, 2024

After the end of World War II in 1945, until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, there was intense geopolitical tension between the...

Narcisse Pelletier: The French Boy Who Lived 17 Years With The Aboriginals

Jul 9, 2024

On April 11, 1875, a pearling schooner named John Bell anchored off the coast of Queensland, Australia. The captain, Joseph Frazer, sent so...

Panjandrum: A Wacky WW2-Era Failed Weapon

Jul 5, 2024

In 1941, the Government of the United Kingdom established a temporary wartime body called the Department of Miscellaneous Weapons Developmen...

The Jews of Verteba Cave

Jul 3, 2024

In the early 1940s, when the Nazi government began systematically hunting down Jewish people, many Jews across Europe sought refuge to avoid...