AnimalsStubbs the cat served as honorary mayor of Talkeetna, Alaska, for more than 20 years. The role was ceremonial - the town has no real government. But that didn't stop up to 40 tourists a day from coming just to meet him. Each afternoon he walked next door for catnip water served in a margarita glass. He died in July 2017 at age 20, still in office.6 minutes ago
PlacesThe Great Pyramids of Giza were once covered in polished white limestone blocks so smooth that a knife blade could not fit between them. In sunlight they blazed like mirrors across the desert. In 1303, an earthquake loosened the casing. A sultan stripped the stones to build mosques in Cairo - and the rough stepped core we see today is what was left behind.1 hour ago
PlacesAt Racetrack Playa in Death Valley, rocks weighing up to 700 lbs slide across cracked mud on their own - leaving trails hundreds of feet long. Nobody caught them moving for nearly 100 years. Scientists finally solved it in 2014: rare winter ice forms overnight, cracks into floating panels at sunrise, and a light breeze pushes the panels against the rocks, skating them silently across the playa.4 hours ago
TrendingAnimalsRonin is an African giant pouched rat, roughly the size of a small cat. Belgian charity APOPO trained him to sniff out landmines in Cambodia. From 2021 to 2025, he found 109 landmines and 15 other unexploded devices there. That broke the Guinness World Record set by his predecessor Magawa. A rat clears a tennis-court area in 30 minutes. A human deminer takes up to four days.5 hours ago
HistoryA natural gas company's robot found hundreds of ancient jars on the Mediterranean floor: a 3,300-year-old Canaanite cargo ship, the oldest ever found in deep water. At 1.8 km depth, cold oxygen-free water kept it perfectly intact. Bronze Age sailors were crossing the open sea by the stars, not hugging the coast.18 hours ago
HistoryThe Pantheon has stood in Rome for nearly 2,000 years, its concrete dome outlasting every modern equivalent. For centuries, engineers blamed the white chunks in Roman concrete on sloppy mixing. In 2023, MIT found the opposite: those "lime clasts" are the secret. When a crack forms and water seeps in, they react and recrystallize to seal it - the concrete heals its own cracks, 2,000 years before we understood the chemistry.19 hours ago
TrendingEntertainmentSteve Jobs was fired from Apple in 1985. He sold nearly every share he owned, keeping just one share to attend meetings. With the money, he bought George Lucas's animation studio for $10 million. That studio was Pixar. Toy Story came out 10 years later. Pixar made him a billionaire first.19 hours ago
PeopleWilliam Kamkwamba dropped out of school at 14 years old when famine hit Malawi and his family could not afford the fees. He walked to a local library and taught himself from the diagrams in a book he could barely read. Then he built a 16-foot windmill from scrapyard junk - and it lit up his family home.22 hours ago
TrendingAnimalsWally is a five-foot alligator from Jonestown, Pennsylvania - and a federally licensed emotional support animal. His owner, Joie Henney, says Wally is believed to be the first reptile ever certified as one. Wally visits senior centers, sits with Joie through cancer radiation, and gives hugs and kisses to anyone who asks. A Loki writer revealed Wally was their real-world visual reference for Alligator Loki on Disney+.1 day ago
ScienceWhen ocean waves glow electric blue at night, the light comes from millions of living creatures. Dinoflagellates - microscopic plankton - carry a chemical called luciferin that flashes the instant water is disturbed. It is a defense: the burst of light summons predators of whatever is eating them. Mosquito Bay on Vieques, Puerto Rico holds the Guinness World Record for the brightest bioluminescent bay, with 700,000 glowing organisms per gallon.1 day ago
TrendingEntertainmentA geologist named Ann Pizzorusso says she solved a 500-year mystery in the Mona Lisa. She matched the rocky landscape behind the subject to Lecco, Italy - the 14th-century Ponte Azzone Visconti bridge, the limestone Alps, and Lake Garlate. Leonardo worked in the Lecco region for years. Not every art historian agrees, but the geological case is hard to argue with.1 day ago
PlacesA London skyscraper accidentally became a giant curved mirror. Its glass facade focused sunlight into a beam so intense it melted a parked Jaguar, scorched a shop, and let a reporter fry an egg on the pavement. The architect had built the same flaw in Las Vegas years earlier.1 day ago