Scientists Decipher Charred Biblical Scroll Using 'Virtual Unwrapping'
The scroll was reduced to charcoal 1400 years ago.
The scroll was reduced to charcoal 1400 years ago.
Wyndclyffe Castle in Rhinebeck, New York, is said to have inspired the phrase "keeping up with the Joneses."
The Tom Sawyer-esque hideout was a big hit with both children and adults.
The Wayside Inn in Sudbury, Massachusetts is missing silverware, pictures, and even a copy of the Declaration of Independence.
Long before the reign of the Tiger King, the Overend family owned Fenella, a tame tiger was permitted to run wild in the fields around the English village of Holmfirth.
This secretive jargon was deliberately designed to confuse the authorities.
An ancient kitchen mishap proves that culinary incompetence is timeless.
The iconic kicks—which made an appearance on The Ramones' debut album and at Yoko Ono's wedding to John Lennon—are turning 100.
Alternate title: a roundup of historic torture devices.
The long list includes bacon, peach cobbler, and possum.
Christie's is auctioning off over 700 items from the Reagans' personal collection later this month.
A relic of an ambitious, abandoned plan to send mail across the U.S. using Cold War-era weaponry.
Over the years, the crown jewels of many nations have been lost or destroyed—sometimes in very mysterious circumstances.
Here are some forgotten niceties worth remembering.
What goes on inside a windmill?
The prison that detained him is now hosting a tribute to the author.
Though what would become known as the NFL was formed on August 20, 1920, the roots of American-style football date back well over a century.
The author wrote the verses for the Primate Dixon Primary School in 1988.
Some of these societies meet to debate issues, while others focus on philanthropy, fine dining, or hell-raising.
The house is located in rural New Hampshire—and it can be yours for one month.
F.D.C. Willard contributed (in his own way) to a study of atomic behavior in varying temperatures.
This dried-out daisy may not look like much, but it’s a testament to one of history’s most ambitious voyages.
The historic object is expected to fetch anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000.
Jennie Bushnell was terrified her six children would be seen as freaks—so she kept their remarkable birth a secret.