Plus: Nat Geo's earliest maps; the amazing dinosaur found by accident; Guatemala's chain-smoking saint
| PHOTOGRAPH BY ROBERT CLARK | | The amazing dinosaur found (accidentally) by miners in Canada | This 110 million-year-old, armored plant-eater, known as a nodosaur, is the best preserved fossil of its kind ever found. For paleontologists the dinosaur’s amazing level of fossilization—caused by its rapid undersea burial—is as rare as winning the lottery. | | | | |
| COURTESY LIANG BUA TEAM | | What happened to the ancient 'hobbits'? | When Homo floresiensis burst onto the scene in 2003, its strange, primitive traits sparked debates about where it fit within the human family tree. As scientists hunted for clues, the hobbit's environment began to come into focus, with a cast of prehistoric creatures almost as bizarre as the hobbit itself. Now, an abundance of rodent remains has added clues to the fate of this tiny human relative. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY PRISMA/ALBUM | | Inside one of ancient Egypt's biggest royal weddings | When Ramses II married a Hittite princess, it strengthened the political alliance between the two former enemies. But the lengthy negotiations, documented on clay tablets preserved in modern Turkey, were filled with twists and turns—including disagreements over the dowry and the princess's rank within the royal harem. | | | |
| COURTESY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAPS | | The story of cartography at National Geographic began with a storm | In the spring of 1888, a blizzard nicknamed "the Great White Hurricane" shut down cities along the Atlantic coastline for four days. That October, National Geographic magazine launched with its first issue and its first map: a footprint-shaped outline of the snowstorm wrapping from New York to Bermuda and wandering in wavy lines up to Canada. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JESSICA CHRISTIAN, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE/GETTY IMAGES | | These brave souls live in haunted houses—and they love it | While lawyers refer to haunted houses as "psychologically impacted" or "stigmatized" properties, a surprising number of people just call them "home." A writer crossed the country looking for folks who consider ghosts to be part of the family. Surprisingly, they weren't hard to find. | | | |
| VIDEO BY BETHANY JONES | | | |
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