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A portrait of Tenochtitlan
tenochtitlan.thomaskole.nl a portrait of Tenochtitlan

a 3D reconstruction of the capital of the Aztec Empire

a portrait of Tenochtitlan

A 3D recreation of the capital of the Aztec empire, with comparisons with modern day Mexico City.

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Why there are no time travelers.
  • Oh like you can hit reverse.esrever tih nac uoy ekil hO

  • Why there are no time travelers.
  • I remember it was in the new books section of the school library and I was attracted to it immediately and spent the day reading it instead of paying attention in my classes. I need to read it again. Thanks for bringing it up!

  • Why there are no time travelers.
  • I read that ages ago. Back in high school, in fact (I'm 46). I don't remember it except the chapter where time is a flock of birds that you have to try to catch to stay youthful. The children can catch them but always let them go and the adults can never catch them.

  • Here's why 6,000 octopuses like to be under the sea at an 'octopus garden'
    www.kuow.org Here's why 6,000 octopuses like to be under the sea at an 'octopus garden'

    Off the coast of California is an unusual "octopus garden" — the largest congregation of deep-sea octopuses ever discovered on Earth, where over 6,000 octopuses huddle around an extinct underwater volcano in the black

    Here's why 6,000 octopuses like to be under the sea at an 'octopus garden'
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    The Closest Planet To Neptune Turns Out To Be... Mercury
  • Mindblowing. I never even thought of things that way!

  • Kitten for scale.
  • Kitten for scale.

    This is from a real paper.

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352409X23003176?via%3Dihub

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    The largest Black Hole compared to Our Solar System
  • That's actually smaller than I would have thought. I wouldn't have expected our solar system to even be visible in comparison.

  • Totally real science!
  • Wow.

    Mercury arc valves remain in use in some South African mines and Kenya (at Mombasa Polytechnic - Electrical & Electronic department).

    Amazing how we're still using such old technology in some places when we have semiconductors.

  • How a massive North Atlantic cooling event disrupted early human occupation in Europe
    www.sciencedaily.com How a massive North Atlantic cooling event disrupted early human occupation in Europe

    A new study finds that around 1.12 million years ago a massive cooling event in the North Atlantic and corresponding shifts in climate, vegetation and food resources disrupted early human occupation of Europe.

    How a massive North Atlantic cooling event disrupted early human occupation in Europe
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    Yes, but the sexy after-glow!
  • That said, a microscope that generates its own light without electricity could be quite useful...

  • Remains found in China may belong to third human lineage
    phys.org Remains found in China may belong to third human lineage

    A team of paleontologists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, working with colleagues from Xi'an Jiaotong University, the University of York, the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences and the National Research Center on Human Evolution, has found evidence of a previously unknown human lineage. I...

    Remains found in China may belong to third human lineage
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    We have reached peak archaeology.
  • The Vikings expanded throughout Russia by using the Volga as a highway.

  • We have reached peak archaeology.
  • I think the writers just couldn't bear it.

  • We have reached peak archaeology.
  • I don't know that you could necessarily develop the wheelbarrow without first having the concept of the wheeled cart.

  • We have reached peak archaeology.
  • Wheeled carts are not very practical without draught animals to pull them. And the one place they had animals like that, in South America, llamas and the civilizations that utilized them lived in the mountains where wheeled carts aren't practical either.

  • We have reached peak archaeology.
  • They say that Native Americans never developed the wheel. They clearly did. For sick dog skateboard tricks.

  • Ancient Peruvian whale may be most massive creature recorded
    www.dw.com Ancient Peruvian whale may be most massive creature recorded – DW – 08/02/2023

    Researchers have identified a gigantic species of extinct whale from bones excavated more than a decade ago. Perucetus colossus may have been heavier than even the largest blue whales.

    Ancient Peruvian whale may be most massive creature recorded – DW – 08/02/2023
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    Why the Big Bang might not have been the beginning of our Universe
  • I just spent 5 minutes on Google because I misread your first line as 'rips sock bong hit' and I was trying to figure out what the hell a sock bong was.

  • NASA launches its own streaming platform
    gizmodo.com NASA launches its own streaming platform

    NASA+ will be a "no subscription required" streaming service for viewing rocket launches and NASA science, with app integration coming later this year.

    NASA launches its own streaming platform
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    Ancient DNA reveals diverse community in 'Lost City of the Incas'
    phys.org Ancient DNA reveals diverse community in 'Lost City of the Incas'

    Who lived at Machu Picchu at its height? A new study, published in Science Advances, used ancient DNA to find out for the first time where workers buried more than 500 years ago came from within the lost Inca Empire.

    Ancient DNA reveals diverse community in 'Lost City of the Incas'
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    Are there any edible Houseplants besides herbs worth growing?
  • Tomatoes can be grown pretty successfully indoors. Also prickly pear.

  • Researchers find evidence of a 2,000-year-old curry, the oldest ever found in Southeast Asia
  • Still too spicy for human consumption. They've been waiting...

  • Is the Universe 13.8 or 26.7 billion years old?
  • No. Karaoke battle.

  • FlyingSquid Flying Squid @mander.xyz
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