A Viking discovery in Norway; positive thinking’s real benefits; Britain’s new dark sky park
| | Wednesday, March 15, 2023 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY NIKU | | Just six inches below a potato field in Norway, ground-penetrating radar revealed a shocking discovery: the ghostly outline of a 60-foot-long wooden ship (pictured above).
The 1,200-year-old vessel may be one of the largest Viking burial ships ever recovered—and is the first ship to be dug up in more than a century. What secrets of Scandinavian warlords—and their preparations for the afterlife—have been uncovered?
Read the full story here.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY DUNCAN SCOBIE | | | |
| Billion-dollar baby: How much would it cost to create a museum fit for a pharaoh? The Egyptians said $1 billion—and that's exactly what they spent. A geneticist (pictured above) collects DNA samples from an unidentified boy mummy found in Pharaoh Amenhotep II's tomb.
See inside the billion-dollar museum. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY KEITH LADZINSKI, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION | | ‘What soil is for the forest’: That’s how foundational sea ice is to the Arctic. But now its once formidable ridges are flatter, the ice itself thinner. That makes life more difficult for creatures from algae to polar bears, Nat Geo reports. (Above, a polar bear climbs onto an iceberg in Greenland.)
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| ILLUSTRATION BY ANDREW FAZEKAS
| | Farewell Orion: The hunter is usually a highlight of the wintertime sky, and with the moon missing during evenings this week, it’s a good chance for final pristine views of winter’s deep sky treasures. Orion Nebula is visible even to the naked eye, near the three stars that mark the belt of the constellation. Also vying for attention at sunset this week, look for Venus and Jupiter in the west. — Andrew Fazekas
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY JENNIFER ADLER, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION | | Protecting the unknown: More than 10 million species roam the high seas—including outlaws and modern-day pirates (although there's no telling if they'll match the biggest loot in history). With many species yet to be discovered, a recent U.N. treaty aims to protect this vast swath of ocean.
There’s a surprisingly lot left to learn about these waters. Read more about what we do know. (Pictured above, a shipwreck turned coral reef.)
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