10 Fun Facts About Saber-Toothed Cats
Why did these terrifying beasts evolve their nasty canines? Were they loners or pride hunters? And could primitive humans have been on the menu? Let’s explore the world of saber-tooth studies.
Why did these terrifying beasts evolve their nasty canines? Were they loners or pride hunters? And could primitive humans have been on the menu? Let’s explore the world of saber-tooth studies.
Who needs hairspray (or a wig, for that matter) when you've got powder and animal fat?
Because Teddy Roosevelt was a man of adventure who loved to experience new things, he experienced a lot of presidential “firsts”—in fact, he was the first sitting president to take a car ride. And he was not impressed.
Somebody had to do them, and we're just glad it wasn't us.
Everyone knows to never use red cloth at any party unless royalty is present. Right?
How a one-time Soviet hero ended up buried in his backyard in Mexico.
Modern detention is nothing compared to kneeling on peas.
Planet George wouldn't be the butt of nearly as many jokes as Uranus.
With a max speed of 6 miles per hour, the first roller coaster in America was the ultimate (wholesome) thrill.
One hundred years ago today, the 19th Amendment—extending the right to vote to women—was passed by the Senate and sent to the states for ratification. On August 18, 1920, American women finally secured that right. Calling the victory hard-won would be a t
It has the ears of a lion and the mouth of a crocodile.
You never thought a showdown could be so full of particulars.
Two little letters brought these seemingly unrelated entities together.
How the fate of the fortune teller came to be.
Cheating you out of your life savings? Sure. Drinking? Out of the question.
There once was a time when uttering the name Kraken sent chills down a mariner’s spine. The legendary beast was known for dragging whole ships down into the watery depths of Davy Jones’s Locker. Today we see the monster largely as fiction, but that doesn’
Who wants to play Little Dickey Birds?
Movies and reality shows tend to show heiresses as scandal-attracting airhead socialites living the high life without a care. But for the historical heiresses below, growing up in luxury did not squelch their thirst for adventure, advocacy, or shattering
Frederik Whitney showed teachers how to bring lessons to life, using just a blackboard and some chalk.
Fourteen years after it was set to open, the National Lighthouse Museum is finally the beacon it was always meant to be.
Most people take for granted that the historic site is priceless. But Sir Cecil Chubb wasn't most people.
The recording spent the past five decades buried in a box in a local library.