Pirate king ‘retired‘ after big heist. Plus, a hero dog; grizzly slog; fish frenzy; and Chinese bard.
| ILLUSTRATION VIA PETER NEWARK HISTORICAL PICTURES, BRIDGEMAN IMAGES
| | India’s royal treasure ship sailed carrying a haul of gold, silver, and jewels worth nine figures today. Who would dare attack the well-armed fleet of the Grand Mughal?
Henry Avery united pirate forces to do what legends like Blackbeard or Captain Kidd could not—carry off piracy’s biggest heist.
Read the full story here.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY JALVAREZG, ISTOCK/GETTY IMAGES | | Where did Henry Avery go? Some say he stopped at St. Mary’s Island, off the coast of Madagascar (pictured above, a pirate cemetery there). Legend has him retiring after his big score, possibly to England. Read more. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JUSTIN JIN | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY CAROLINE GUTMAN | | Dyeing to know: Indigo is making a comeback in South Carolina, where it once thrived in the 17th and 18th centuries. Like its color, the dye-making plant has a dark past: It took about 180 pounds of leaves to make one pound of dye, and over 1 million pounds were harvested a year, playing a major role in making the coastal state the wealthiest of the 13 colonies, Nat Geo reports.
Then indigo disappeared for some 250 years.
Now, the plant is back. (Pictured above, Caroline Harper straightens out scarves dyed with indigo in Charleston.) | | | |
| Shed some light: Lantern fish (pictured) are rarely seen—until now. Watch as these little creatures migrate from the depths of the sea to its surface at night. ”Occasionally, for reasons we don’t understand, they get caught at the surface and feeding frenzy develops,” says Nat Geo Explorer Bertie Gregory. He made this photograph for his adventure show on Disney+. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY PAUL SALOPEK | | Writing verse 1,300 years later: Poetry plays a part in all Chinese celebrations — marriages, births, deaths — and children memorize ancient verse in school, reports Nat Geo Explorer Paul Salopek.
Li Hong Bin (right), a 62-year-old man who’s given up his family, friends, and job to pursue poetry, believes he’s the reincarnated Li Bai, a famous classical Chinese poet born in 701. “We sacrifice ourselves for the people,” Bin tells Nat Geo.
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We hope you liked today’s newsletter. This was edited and curated by Jen Tse, Hannah Farrow, and David Beard. Have an idea or a link for us? Write david.beard@natgeo.com. Happy trails! | | | |
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