Plus: The real Robin Hood; the Age of Man; the story of 10,000-year-old footprints
Extraordinary people, discoveries, and places | |
| BRITISH MUSEUM/RMN-GRAND PALAIS | | The mysterious group of marauders who struck fear across the Mediterranean | Thousands of years before Blackbeard, buccaneers raided ships, stole booty—and even kidnapped a young Julius Caesar. But the most feared of them all, a group known as the Sea Peoples, came to overshadow all others. Their identity and nationality remains one of the biggest questions in the history of the ancient Mediterranean. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JOE MCNALLY, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION | | Multiple lines of mysterious ancient humans interbred with us | DNA suggests the ghostly Denisovans may be not one, but three distinct kinds of human. What's more, one group co-existed and mixed with modern humans in New Guinea until at least 30,000 years ago—but perhaps as recently as 15,000 years ago—a date that, if confirmed, means Denisovans were the last known humans save ourselves to walk the Earth. | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY GRANGER/AURIMAGES (LEFT) AND PHOTOGRAPH BY BRIDGEMAN/ACI (RIGHT) | | Who was the real Robin Hood? | Like the roots of Sherwood Forest, the origins of the Robin Hood story extend deep into English history. The earliest versions of the folk hero, which date back to the 14th century, would be almost unrecognizable when compared to the green-clad, bow-wielding Robin Hood of today. But just as Robin Hood eludes the Sheriff of Nottingham, pinning down the folk hero's exact origins has proved to be a challenge. | | | |
| COURTESY OF NPS AND BOURNEMOUTH UNIVERSITY | | | |
| Rain may have pelted the traveler's face as their bare feet slid on the mud. They paused to briefly set the toddler on the ground before pressing on; a wooly mammoth and giant sloth ambled across their freshly laid tracks. Several hours later, the traveler followed the same route south, this time empty-handed. | —MAYA WEI-HAAS, writer
From: Incredible details of 10,000-year-old trek revealed in fossil footprints | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY THOMAS PESCHAK, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY TIM PATTERSON | | Welcome to the Age of Man. The trick is figuring out when it began. | The shift in Earth's systems is so profound, some researchers argue, that we've entered a new geological epoch. After the Pleistocene ice ages and the warm and stable Holocene epoch that, over the last 12,000 years or so, gave rise to human civilization, we've now created the “Anthropocene." If so, geologists need a way to pinpoint its beginning in a tangible way. They're getting close. | | | |
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