No steroids involved. Plus, Britain’s first Black queen; the origins of Mother’s Day; happy International Nurses Day
| PHOTOGRAPH BY MILLARD H. SHARP/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY | | It’s like a cartoon. A tiny animal emerges the size of a rhino.
A new study sheds light on “thunder beasts”—prehistoric mammals that grew over the generations from 40 pounds to more than a ton (a skeleton, above). On a veggie diet. With no steroids. | | | |
| IMAGE VIA ART COLLECTION / ALAMY STOCK PHOTO | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY BETTMANN, CORBIS | | It's not what it used to be: An activist worked for decades on a dream of a quiet, reflective day for mothers and their children. Anna Jarvis (pictured above) achieved a Mother's Day holiday—but it wasn't what she wanted. “To have Mother’s Day the burdensome, wasteful, expensive gift day that Christmas and other special days have become, is not our pleasure," she wrote in the 1920s. Do you agree? Let us know.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY CRISTINA FLETES-BOUTTE, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE/GETTY IMAGES | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY AMI VITALE | | | |
Today’s soundtrack: She Goes To Work, Jake Dodds
Happy Friday! This newsletter has been curated and edited by Jen Tse, Hannah Farrow, and David Beard. What's on your travel bucket list? Email david.beard@natgeo.com to let us know. Thanks for reading! | | | |
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