Archive for the 'Ancient Wonders' Category

Speaking of Popes, What Do You Know About Pope Joan?

67029_621611487856340_1267289347_n

 

Pope Joan. Is she a legend from the Middle Ages or a true historical anomaly? Did she really disguise herself as a man, working her way up the ladder of the clergy until Popedom – only to be discovered as female when she gave birth on horseback? Was she then murdered by an angry mob?

 

Imagine if we had a female Pope today. How would she be received in our age? With respect or disdain?

 

Learn more about the enigmatic tale (or reality?) of Pope(ess) Joan, here.

Share

“De-Extinction” Project: Is This The Beginning Of A Real Life Jurassic Park?

Dodo

 

Some extremely smart people (the “Revive & Restore Initiative“) are starting a new project called “De-Extinction”. There’s a big conference and TED “talk” happening tomorrow at The National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C., to which you may tune in here.

 

What will they be talking about exactly?

 

…”Revive & Restore, with the support of TED and in partnership with National Geographic Society, is convening a day-long conference to showcase the prospects of bringing extinct species back to life, along with a discussion of the ethical issues that will raise…”

 

Yes, you read that correctly: “the prospects of bringing extinct species back to life.”

 

More background here, and take a poll: Which species would you like to see revived? (The Tasmanian tiger, the California condor, the woolly mammoth…? Revive & Restore are already hard at work on the North American passenger pigeon which was last seen alive almost a century ago.)

 

 

Share

Zooming through space…

Click the link below. It might just blow your mind to see a moving model of how our solar system looks in motion from a distance. Remember, the sun is traveling around the galactic core at 52,000 miles per hour!

 

Essentially, we are inside a giant unfurling explosion that might just be happening in a split second on some other spatial level…

 

Intense.

 

Click here.

Share

« Previous PageNext Page »