Plus: 100 archaeological treasures that define us; the 32-year earthquake; the myth of Thomas Edison
Extraordinary people, discoveries, and places | |
| ILLUSTRATION BY MATTHEW TWOMBLY | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY MANUEL COHEN/AURIMAGES | | | |
| IMAGE BY NIDAY PICTURE LIBRARY/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO | | An earthquake lasted 32 years, and scientists want to know how | When a magnitude 8.5 mega-earthquake struck off the Indonesian island of Sumatra in February 1861, it caused the land to convulse, stirring up a wall of water that crashed on nearby shores and killed thousands of people. Now it appears it was no isolated incident. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRISTINA WARINNER | | The remarkable story of how a medieval woman was unmasked as an artist | When you imagine a scribe from the Middle Ages, copying the world's knowledge onto parchment pages by candlelight, you probably picture a man—more specifically a monk. But precious dust found in the mouth of a woman buried thousands of years ago opens a previously unknown window into the lives of female scribes. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY NATHAN LAZARNICK, GEORGE EASTMAN MUSEUM/GETTY IMAGES | | Thomas Edison didn't invent the light bulb. Here's what he did do. | He has more than a thousand patents to his name, and his innovations helped define the modern world. But in his early days, he crafted a different sort of reputation. This is the story of how "the [telegraph] operator who couldn't keep a job" became the wizard of Menlo Park. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDREA FRAZZETTA | | A Roman 'superhighway' is disappearing. Can Italy save it in time? | At a McDonald's on the outskirts of Rome, you can peer through a glass floor and see flat, gray paving stones of an ancient Roman road and twisted skeletons embedded in a two-millennia-old gutter. These are remnants of an offshoot of Europe’s first major highway, the Appian Way, begun in 312 B.C. But its legacy has been largely neglected—until now. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY PETER MATHER | | Lynx take epic, 2,000-mile treks—but why is a mystery | In the last five years, scientists have tracked the Arctic wildcats on journeys longer and more challenging than ever thought possible—including one male's remarkable 2,174-mile journey. But the mystery of just why they do it remains. | | | |
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