Stories from Meilan Solly
Divers Encounter a Human-Size Jellyfish Off the Coast of England
Barrel jellyfish typically grow to a length of up to 3 feet, but this one measured closer to 5 feet long
Sadie Roberts-Joseph, Slain Activist, Showed How Museums Can Raise Up Their Communities
Baton Rouge police described the museum founder, whose death has been ruled a homicide, as a ‘tireless advocate of peace’
Did Stonehenge’s Builders Use Lard to Move Its Boulders Into Place?
Animal fat residue found on ceramic vessels suggests the ancient Britons who built the monument greased their wooden sledges with lard
A Literary Vandal Is Ripping Pages Out of Books and Putting Them Back on Shelves
The so-called ‘book ripper’ has targeted more than 100 volumes at a library and charity bookshop in the English town of Herne Bay
This Poker-Playing A.I. Knows When to Hold ‘Em and When to Fold ‘Em
Pluribus won an average of around $5 per hand, or $1,000 per hour, when playing against five human opponents
A Nellie Bly Memorial Is Coming to Roosevelt Island
The journalist famously wrote a six-part exposé cataloging the 10 days she spent at an asylum on Blackwell’s Island
See a Python Swallow a Crocodile Whole
A kayaker captured the gruesome photographs while exploring a swamp in Queensland, Australia
Pompeii Is Home to Multiple Undetonated World War II Bombs
A statement by the Archaeological Museum of Pompeii assures the public that there is ‘no risk for visitors’
Thanks to Light Pollution, We’re Losing Nemo
In trials, light-exposed eggs hatched normally as soon as scientists removed an overhead LED designed to simulate artificial light conditions
Consider the Nature of Perception at Olafur Eliasson’s New Show
Tate Modern retrospective features some 40 works pulled from the artist’s decades-long career
Hundreds of Artifacts Looted From Iraq and Afghanistan to Be Repatriated
The trove, currently stored at the British Museum for safekeeping, includes 4th-century Buddhist sculpture fragments and 154 Mesopotamian cuneiform tablets
Researchers Develop Plant-Based, Eco-Friendly Method to Produce Tylenol
Current manufacturing processes rely on coal tar, which is produced using fossil fuels
How the Camera Introduced Americans to Their Heroines
A new show at the National Portrait Gallery spotlights figures including Harriet Beecher Stowe, Lucretia Mott and Margaret Fuller
Lion of Mosul Statue Brought Back Through 3-D Printed Replica
The resurrected sculpture is featured in the Imperial War Museum’s ‘Culture Under Attack’ exhibition
One Climate Crisis Disaster Occurs Every Week, U.N. Official Warns
Governments should prioritize ‘adaptation and resilience’ measures designed to curb the effects of ongoing lower-impact climate events, experts say
Thousands of Newly Unearthed Photographs Document Ugandans’ Life Under Idi Amin
Around 150 of the images are now on view at the Uganda Museum in Kampala
Ancient Chinese Graves Reveal Evidence of Early Skull Reshaping
Humans may have compressed infants’ soft heads with their hands, bound them between boards or wrapped them tightly in cloth
Not Even Chemicals Can Stop the Indomitable Cockroach
A new study suggests it will soon be “almost impossible” to control the insects with chemicals alone
Satellite Images Reveal the Extent of Chennai’s Water Shortage
Poor management, groundwater overuse and climate change-driven weather shifts are among the factors driving the crisis
The Frick Revives 18th-Century Frescoes Destroyed During World War II
A new exhibition unites preparatory paintings, drawings and photographs of Tiepolo’s Palazzo Archinto frescoes
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