Afleveringen
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Using photosynthesis to create rocket fuel in space and turning old cement bags into solar-powered backpacks that are helping children with reading. Plus, on This Day in History, the first chocolate covered ice cream bar.
Chinese Space Station Achieves First-Ever Oxygen and Rocket Fuel Production Using Artificial Photosynthesis | ZME Science
In A World-First, Oxygen And Rocket Fuel Made Using Artificial Photosynthesis in Space | Wonderful Engineering
In a first, oxygen and rocket fuel made using artificial photosynthesis in space | Interesting Engineering
NASA's Experiment: Future of Photosynthesis - Christian Kromme
Assessment of the technological viability of photoelectrochemical devices for oxygen and fuel production on Moon and Mars | Nature Communications
Entrepreneur Transforms Old Cement Bags into Solar-Charging Backpacks to Help Children Read at Night | Good News Network
Solar-charging backpacks are helping children to read after dark | CNN
The Weird, Brief History of the Eskimo Pie Corporation | Smithsonian
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Uncovering the mysteries deep within the Earth’s mantle, a nearly complete ancient shark fossil found in Peru, and on This Day in History, a double feature - the first woman to earn a medical degree in the United States and the birth of the frisbee. A Lost World Beneath the Pacific Ocean? Mysterious Structures Discovered Deep Within Earth’s Mantle | SciTechDailyScientists discover 'sunken worlds' hidden deep within Earth's mantle that shouldn't be there | Live ScienceFull-waveform inversion reveals diverse origins of lower mantle positive wave speed anomalies | Scientific ReportsGreat white shark's 9-million-year-old ancestor found in Peru | ReutersNearly complete fossil of Great White Shark ancestor discovered | Interesting EngineeringBiography: Elizabeth BlackwellElizabeth Blackwell MD - Women in Medicine and Science at Upstate - Subject Guides at SUNY Upstate Medical UniversityElizabeth Blackwell | Biography & Facts | BritannicaElizabeth Blackwell - Life, Education & AccomplishmentsFrisbee inventor dies at 90 | US news | The GuardianWalter Fredrick Morrison dies at 90; father of the Frisbee - Los Angeles TimesWalter Morrison: The Inventor of the Frisbee - BiographyHubMeet Walter Frederick Morrison: The Inventor of the Frisbee - HubPagesContact the show - [email protected] more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Groundbreaking surgery that removed a brain tumor through the eye socket, the inheritance left to a town that the deceased never visited, the Lazio team mascot won’t be allowed at the games anymore due to inappropriate pictures, and drug addicted rats cause havoc at police stations. Plus, on This Day in History, the creation of the CIA.
Surgeons Make History by Removing Woman’s Brain Tumor Through Her Eye | Gizmodo
Surgeons remove tumour through patient's eye socket in UK first | UK News | Sky News
Man Leaves €10m Fortune to a Tiny French Town He Never Visited | Good News Network
Small town shocked to inherit $10 million fortune from stranger | New York Post
Italian soccer club Lazio fires falconer for posting photos of his penis implant | AP News
'Drug-addicted rats' infesting Houston police evidence room | NBC News
Watch: 'Drug-addicted rats' destroying evidence in Houston police lockers - UPI.com
History of CIA - CIA
Establishment of the CIA | Harry S. Truman
The Creation of the Central Intelligence Group - CSI
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) | History, Organization, Responsibilities, Activities, & Criticism | Britannica
History of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) | Harris Federal
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How carrots may be the key to defending against diabetes, what the world’s oldest ice, extracted from two miles beneath the Antarctic surface, can tell us about our planet – and crowns, scepters and other jewels discovered behind a wall in Lithuania … we’ve got details on who they belonged to. Plus, on This Day in History, the start of the DeLorean Motor Company.
Carrots May Be Key to Unlocking Microbiome's Diabetes Defense System
Effect of carrot intake on glucose tolerance, microbiota, and gene expression in a type 2 diabetes mouse model - Kobaek‐Larsen - 2024 - Clinical and Translational Science - Wiley Online Library
Scientists Drill Ice Core–2 Miles Down–Extracting 1.2 Million Years of Climate Record On Earth
Beyond EPICA: Press releases
Burial crowns of Polish-Lithuanian rulers found in Vilnius
Crowns and Scepters Discovered Hidden Inside the Walls Beneath a Lithuanian Cathedral
The DeLorean Factory, Belfast: where it is & how to visit
DeLorean Motor Company and the DMC-12: the full story | Auto Express
Delorean DMC-12 - Modern Racer - Modern Classics
DeLorean DMC-12: A Detailed Look at an Iconic Sports Car | Amazing Cars and Drives
The Sad Death Of John DeLorean
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The revised definition of obesity and a new species of snake and spider there were announced decades after being found. Plus, on This Day in History, the "Father of American Rollercoasters".
BMI Sidelined in New Obesity Definition That Favors Health Evaluation | Scientific American
New species of house snake discovered in Ethiopia: photo | Miami Herald
New snake species found 20 years after initial sighting in Ethiopia - Science - News - Daily Express US
Scientists discover new ‘unusually large’ species of one of world’s deadliest spiders | The Independent
'Big boy' spider becomes Australia's largest and deadliest arachnid after surprise discovery | Live Science
The world’s most venomous spider is a species complex: systematics of the Sydney funnel-web spider (Atracidae: Atrax robustus) | BMC Ecology and Evolution | Full Text
History of LaMarcus Thompson's Scenic Railway Roller Coasters at Coney Island
La Marcus Edna Thompson | Coney Island History Project
OH native was inventor of the roller coaster
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The huge aquifer discovered in the Oregon Cascades and the toilet paper made from used diapers - you heard that correct. Plus, on This Day in History, Popeye makes his first appearance.
Atop the Oregon Cascades, UO team finds a huge buried aquifer | OregonNews
Japan Coalition Selling World's 1st Toilet Paper Made from Used Diapers
First Versions: Popeye (comics)
Popeye | Newspaper Comic Strips
Popeye’s Comic Debut | Mystic Stamp Discovery Center
First Versions Popeye First Appearance : Elzie Crisler Segar : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive (First Comic Strip Link)
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What you should do to prepare for the upcoming TikTok ban and the why the moon may be the best place for a human settlement, at least for now. Plus, on This Day in History, the hoax article advertising the fictitious theatrical performer "The Bottle Conjuror" that caused a riot when he didn’t appear.
U.S. TikTok ban: How it would work and how to prepare : NPR
TikTok Ban — Why You Should Delete Your iPhone, Android App Next Week
Food grows better on the moon than on Mars, scientists find | Space
2024 Mars Terraforming Workshop Proceedings
TDIH: The Great Bottle Conjurer Hoax
TDIH: The Bottle Conjurer
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On this Weird Wednesday episode, the future of satellites could be wood, the mysterious ring that fell in Kenya, the new flavors of potato chips that are here to stay, and the long-lost Christmas present. Plus, on This Day in History, we go back to the Great Molasses Flood in Boston.
Astronauts Release Wooden Satellite From Space Station | The Byte
LignoSat: World’s first wooden satellite, developed in Japan, heads to space | CNN
Remember That Metal Ring That Fell From the Sky? We Still Don't Know Where It Came From | Gizmodo
A glowing ring of metal fell to Earth, and no one has any idea what it is - Ars Technica
Doritos Has a First-of-Its-Kind Flavor Hitting Shelves Now
Lay’s Is Bringing Its Most-Requested Flavor to the U.S. For the First Time Ever
Watch: Christmas gift from 1978 found behind wall of Illinois home - UPI.com
Why the Great Molasses Flood Was So Deadly | HISTORY
What Was the Great Molasses Flood? | Food & Wine
Boston Molasses Flood: The Strangest Disaster in American History | YouTube (VIDEO)
100 years ago today: Molasses crashes through Boston's North End | Boston.gov
Boston | History, Population, Map, Climate, & Facts | Britannica
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Plans of emerged on how we can travel to the nearest star system in just 20 to 40 years, and we look at what a good night’s sleep can do for your mind. Plus, on This Day in History, the wind instrument family gets a bit larger with the addition of the clarinet.
Scientists Have a Radical Plan to Travel to the Nearest Star System Within a Human Lifetime | Popular Mechanics
Revolutionary Plan to Reach Nearest Star System in Our Lifetime! - Jurnal Time
Physicists Unveil Radical Plan to Send a Probe Into Interstellar Space : ScienceAlert
A Deep Sleep Clears the Mind at Night Like a Dishwasher Cleaning–But Beware of Sleeping Pills | Good News Network
Johann Denner | Inventor of The Clarinet | All Things Denner
A Brief History of the Clarinet
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How pupil size during sleep helps sort new and old memories and enhances memory retention, and the latest on last week's Mercury fly-by. Plus, on This Day in History, Henry Ford’s plastic automobile.
Pupil size in sleep reveals how memories are sorted, preserved | ScienceDaily
Spacecraft buzzes Mercury's north pole and beams back stunning photos | AP News
Stunning Close-Up Images Reveal Mercury’s Icy Craters and Volcanic Plains | SciTechDaily
Soybean Car - The Henry Ford
Henry Ford's Plastic Hemp Car | January 13th, 1942
This Day in Patent History – On January 13, 1942, Henry Ford patented a Soybean car (a plastic car), which is 30% lighter than a regular car – Patent Yogi LLC
The Rearview Mirror: Henry Ford’s Plastic Fantastic Car - The Detroit Bureau
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Marques returns to CES and learns how Oshkosh truck is preparing your ‘neighborhood of the future. Plus, NASA is looking to cut costs on its mission to bring rocks samples back to Earth from Mars, and how coffee and reduce the chances of head and neck cancer. Also, on This Day in History, the start of the Texas Oil Boom.
The maker of the electric USPS truck is also building garbage robots and EV firefighters - The Verge
NASA proposes cheaper and quicker way to get Mars rocks and soil to Earth | AP News
NASA announces way forward on Mars rock plan : NPR
Coffee Drinkers Less at Risk of Head and Neck Cancers, New Research Suggests | Good News Network
Spindletop Oilfield | Texas State Historically Association
Spindletop ‑ Geyser, Timeline & Discovery | History.com
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Marques reports from the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas where Alaska Airlines has a jet like you’ve never seen before, and on This Day in History, Christopher Columbus sights mermaids in the Caribbean…and he’s not impressed.
Why Alaska Airlines is investing in a jet that's like nothing you've seen before - Fast Company
Has The Time Finally Come For This Sci-Fi Looking Aircraft?
Columbus mistakes manatees for mermaids | January 9, 1493 | HISTORY
Columbus mistakes manatees for mermaids | Sky HISTORY TV Channel
Uncovering the Ancient Origins of Mermaids - Ocean Info
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It is a Weird Wednesday episode, and we cover scientists that have developed technology to control cyborg insect swarms, a town that made getting sick illegal, toilet seats that can’t handle toilet paper, and another town that is just going bananas over pealed bananas- we’ll explain. Plus, on This Day in History, we look back to the Battle of New Orleans.
Scientists develop technology to control cyborg insect swarms | ScienceDaily
Scientists develop technology to control cyborg insect swarms | TechXplore
Swarm navigation of cyborg-insects in unknown obstructed soft terrain | Nature Communications
Italian mayor's proclamation makes it illegal to get sick - UPI.com
Toilet maker warns customers not to wipe the seats with toilet paper - UPI.com
Peeled bananas left on English street corner each month vex locals - UPI.com
TDIH: Chalmette National Historical Park (Battle of New Orleans)
TDIH: The American Battlefield Trust's map of the War of 1812 Battle of New Orleans, January 8, 1815
TDIH: Battle of New Orleans
YouTube: Johnny Horton Sings The Battle of New Orleans (1959)
TDIH: The Battle of New Orleans
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Bioengineers develop a groundbreaking 'Smart Cell' construction kit for disease-fighting therapies" and how some video games can improve your mental health and add balance to your life. Plus, on This Day in History, the video phone that was released over 30 years ago.Breakthrough for 'smart cell' design | ScienceDailyJournal of Medical Internet Research - Open-World Games’ Affordance of Cognitive Escapism, Relaxation, and Mental Well-Being Among Postgraduate Students: Mixed Methods StudyOpen-World Video Games Boost Relaxation and Mental Well-Being - Neuroscience NewsOpen-World Games Like Zelda Can Boost Your Mental Health, Study Says : ScienceAlertAT&T calls new video phone wave of the future - UPI ArchivesAT&T launched the VideoPhone 2500 in 1992. It sold for $1,499 | CNN BusinessSponsored By Acorns - Head to at acorns.com/cool or download the Acorns app to start saving and investing for your future today!Contact the show - [email protected] more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On today’s episode, we’ve all heard it before during winter - “If you don’t dress warm, you're going to catch a cold”. We take a look at why winter makes you more vulnerable to colds. Also, what 2025 has in store for your stargazing plans. Plus, on This Day in History, we spin the wheel for the first time, as Wheel of Fortune debuts on NBC.
Why winter makes you more vulnerable to colds – a public health nurse explains the science behind the season | The Conversation
January stargazing: Ring in 2025 with a meteor shower, 'planet parade,' and best chance to spot Mars | Popular Science
The Sky Promises Many Big Events in 2025
The first meteor shower of 2025, the Quadrantids, is here. Here's how to catch a glimpse | AP News
‘Wheel of Fortune’ Turns 40, But Do You Remember the Other Versions? | TV Insider
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Human activity could be changing the Earth’s tilt and rotation, and researchers discover squirrels that don’t just eat nuts - they hunt and eat voles. Plus, on This Day in History, construction begins on the Brooklyn Bridge, the first steel-wire suspended bridge in the world.
Human activity is changing Earth’s tilt and rotation. What does that mean for the planet? | BBC Science Focus Magazine
Carnivorous squirrels documented in California | ScienceDaily
ASCE Metropolitan Section - Brooklyn Bridge
A Mini History Lesson on the Brooklyn Bridge, Downtown’s Stunning Suspension - Downtown Alliance
Brooklyn Bridge - New World Encyclopedia
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We look back at some of the more interesting species discovered in 2024. Plus, an update on the Weird Wednesday story of a man targeting the record for consecutive days living underwater. On This Day in History, the first spacecraft to escape Earth’s gravity and enter geocentric orbit – and here’s a hint – it did NOT come from the United States.
Scientists have identified an estimated 10% of all species on Earth. Here’s what they found in 2024 | CNN
Vampire hedgehogs, pirate spiders and fishy fungi - the strangest new species of 2024 | BBC
Scientist refuses to resurface after breaking world record for longest time underwater
Researcher Experiments Living Underwater for 100 Days to Study How High Pressure Impacts Longevity. The Results Are Baffling
NASA - NSSDCA - Spacecraft - Details
Luna | Moon, Soviet, & Exploration | Britannica
On this date: USSR launches Luna 1 probe to moon
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Scientists notice that great apes love teasing and fooling around, which leads them to believe humor is older than humans. Plus, researchers discover some artificial heart patients are able to regrow heart muscle, offering new hope for future treatments. On This Day in History, the tradition of celebrating New Year’s Eve at Times Square began over 100 years ago and a few later, the ball drop begins.
Great Apes Joke Around, Suggesting Humor Is Older Than Humans | Scientific American
Spontaneous playful teasing in four great ape species | Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Can the heart heal itself? New study says it can | ScienceDaily
NYE History & Times Square Ball | Times Square NYC
The History of New Year's Eve in Times Square | CityPASS® Blog
A Brief History of Times Square’s New Year’s Eve Celebration
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AI-designed "nanocages" that mimic viral structures are offering groundbreaking advancements in gene therapy and biomedical innovation. Also, 250 shipwrecks containing 22 tons of gold and silver have been identified off the coast of Portugal. Plus, on This Day in History, the first major labor dispute in the US auto industry.
Virus that threatened humanity opens the future | ScienceDaily
250 ships with treasures off Portugal coast - The Portugal News
Shipwreck with 22 Tons of Gold Treasure Identified off Portugal Coast - GreekReporter.com
Shipwreck Holding 22 Tons of Gold Treasure Found off Portugal’s Coast
The 1936 Sit‑Down Strike That Shook the Auto Industry | HISTORY
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On today's episode; the oldest mammalian ancestor is discovered, an update on the flight of the Parker Solar Probe, plus, on 'This Day in History', the show that would influence children's television for generations to come -- Howdy Doody.
World's oldest mammalian ancestor discovered in Mallorca
This dog-like predator is the oldest known mammal ancestor | Popular Science
Early–middle Permian Mediterranean gorgonopsian suggests an equatorial origin of therapsids | Nature Communications
TDIH: Norb’s Corner: “It’s Howdy Doody time!”
TDIH: 1947: NBC Introduces Howdy Doody on 'Puppet Playhouse Presents'
From Doodyville to Detroit: The History of Howdy Doody, a Legendary Show of the Golden Age of TV
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