10 Oldest Artifacts Of Their Type Ever Found

10 Jewelry Jewelry is interesting in that it has no value that isn’t social—it doesn’t keep us warm or help us find food. The earliest example of people displaying decoration for its own sake is from 100,000 years ago. Scientists uncovered a collection of shells from Skhul Cave, an archaeological site on Mount Carmel in Israel. Similar items have been found in another site in Algeria. The shells—from a genus of mollusk known as Nassarius—had a hole drilled through the middle so they could be strung on a necklace or bracelet....

December 24, 2022 · 9 min · 1709 words · Georgianna Wilson

10 Outrageous Scandals That Rocked The Vatican In Recent Years

10 Gay Orgy At Cardinal’s Apartment An Italian newspaper called Il Fatto Quotidiano first reported that the Vatican police broke up a gay orgy in June 2017 involving at least one member of the Catholic Church. The apartment where the orgy was taking place belongs to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and its current occupant is alleged to be Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio. The cardinal has served as the president of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts since 2007 and is a personal adviser to Pope Francis....

December 24, 2022 · 10 min · 2058 words · Steven Moran

10 People Executed For Murder Who Definitely Didn T Do It

In some cases of these cases, the miscarriage of justice was caused by unfortunate happenstance. In others, the blame falls upon neglect or willful interference by the police and judiciary, whose responsibility it was to ensure that the suspect was granted a fair trial. Here are ten people who definitely didn’t do it. 10 Harry Gleeson Moll McCarthy was murdered in in County Tipperary, Ireland, in 1940. Moll was well-known in the town as a prostitute....

December 24, 2022 · 13 min · 2567 words · Elaine Degroat

10 People Immortalized In Products

Qualifications: there is no obligation for the listed persons to have invented or created the object or process concerned. This is in any case frequently unrecorded, or impossible to verify. So far as is known, none of those listed have had their names immortalized as a result of deliberate theft of another’s work. The objects or processes included must be tangible or tangible processes involved in the creation of objects....

December 24, 2022 · 11 min · 2329 words · Michael Latsha

10 People Who Documented Their Deaths

Some knew they were dying and documented their deaths, taking notes, or sometimes photos and videos, of their slow end. Others didn’t realize they were dying, even though the possibility was there. Some of these people’s notes have valuable medical uses and give us a glimpse into death. 10 Karl Schmidt Between September 25 and 26, 1957, Karl Patterson Schmidt, a herpetologist (a person who studies reptiles and amphibians) wrote notes explaining how he felt as he slowly died of a snakebite....

December 24, 2022 · 11 min · 2208 words · Earl Cervera

10 Perfectly Macabre Abandoned Buildings

10Spanish Doll Factory This doll factory in Spain has an uncomfortable way of getting under your skin. It was abandoned sometime in the ’80s, but for some reason everything was left behind—boxes of doll parts, machinery, half-finished dolls still lying on the assembly line—everything. It’s as if everybody just vanished in the middle of the work day. At the time the factory was in operation, porcelain dolls were commonly made with human hair, which somehow makes these things even creepier....

December 24, 2022 · 8 min · 1571 words · Robert Fulton

10 Prehistoric Bugs That Could Seriously Mess You Up

But what if that centipede were three feet long? Hundreds of millions of years ago, monsters like these were everywhere. Here are a few of the most horrifying prehistoric bugs ever to walk—or should I say crawl—the earth. Anomalocaris canadensis looked like a strange blend of squid and shrimp. It was three feet (1.0 m) long, with a mouth full of razor-sharp teeth. Fossils found in China show a massive undersea arthropod that lived about 500 million years ago....

December 24, 2022 · 5 min · 966 words · Daniel Vaillancourt

10 Recently Discovered Ancient Skeletons That Tell Curious Tales

10 Hand Holding Men The bubonic plague that swept through London was something out of a nightmare. The 1348 wave slaughtered more than half of the population. Nearly 50,000 victims received hasty burials in Smithfield. One grave held two men holding hands; their heads turned to look to the right. Another skull was also found with the pair. The men were aged in their 40s and arranged in identical positions, with one man’s left hand holding the right of his companion....

December 24, 2022 · 9 min · 1840 words · Crystal Vargas

10 Ridiculously Common Things Our Ancestors Used To Revere

10 Pretzels Most people would probably agree that pretzels are delicious. But how many would consider them the stuff of kings? For an answer to that question, look no further than Sweden in the early 17th century. Around the year 1614, pretzels were considered so prestigious that royal couples used them in their wedding ceremonies. Just stop and think for a second about how crazy this is. You’ve got two blue-blooded people marrying, with all the combined wealth of their rich families, and they choose to tie the knot with a pretzel....

December 24, 2022 · 12 min · 2344 words · Clara Degiulio

10 Secret Histories Behind Well Known Hats

Everything comes from somewhere. Even what we wear on our heads everyday can broadcast surprising messages or continue unexpected traditions. In many cases, a hat’s original connotations were the last thing you’d ever guess today. 10 Fedoras Represent Female Empowerment While not exactly like the hat worn today, the fedora was once a costume piece in an 1880s play named Fedora. (The play was named after the lead character, a Russian princess, not the hat itself....

December 24, 2022 · 12 min · 2367 words · Lovella Walko

10 Shocking And Bizarre Riot Control Weapons From Around The World

10 Sonic Weapons Designed For Crowd Control It’s well known that loud noises can cause extreme pain and hearing loss, but it wasn’t until very recently that these noises became fully weaponized. The US government has been using a powerful device for quite some time now called the Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD). It was originally developed in order to project commands over extremely long distances, especially out at sea. LRADs were also used on the ocean to deter piracy....

December 24, 2022 · 11 min · 2202 words · Sue Abramek

10 Species That Are Smarter Than Anyone Thought

10Ravens Understand Espionage Ravens can’t stop impressing us with their sharp mental game and have just claimed another superlative for the corvid family—the animal kingdom’s best (non-human) abstract thinkers. Scientists wondered: Are ravens able to consider the thoughts of others as they make decisions? Can they get into others’ heads? To find out, University of Vienna researchers employed 10 ravens—all raised in captivity—and placed them, two at a time, on either side of a room separated down the middle by a window....

December 24, 2022 · 10 min · 1983 words · Edward Murley

10 Strange And Intriguing Conspiracy Theories About Crimes

10 The Murder Of Vishal Mehrotra And The Mysterious Elm Guest House A massive child sex abuse scandal is currently brewing in Britain, with police looking at decades of evidence and allegations about VIP pedophile rings. Already, a number of prominent politicians, entertainers, and other society elites have been implicated. These official inquiries have also drudged up sinister allegations about the kidnapping of a young boy over three decades ago. In 1981, on the day that Princess Diana and Prince Charles wed to a global audience of millions, 10-year-old Vishal Mehrotra was walking with his nanny to his home in London before disappearing in a large crowd of people....

December 24, 2022 · 21 min · 4328 words · Charles Moore

10 Strange Facts About Famous Historical Villains

10 Billy The Kid Was Almost Pardoned At just 19 years old, William Henry McCarty Jr., aka “Billy the Kid,” had already achieved national infamy as one of the most well-known outlaws of the day. But by 1878, tired of his life of crime, he wrote to the newly appointed governor of New Mexico, Lew Wallace, that he was tired of fighting. In response, Wallace suggested that he would pardon Billy if he would testify before a grand jury about the Lincoln County War, a frontier conflict between two factions of New Mexico....

December 24, 2022 · 10 min · 2096 words · Gay Edens

10 Strange Hobbies That Are Becoming Popular

Our culture is changing around us more quickly than ever, and some people have reacted to those changes in the weirdest ways. All of a sudden, we have the world at our fingertips, and anyone can be famous if they find the right angle. The result? Some pretty wild and shocking hobbies. Here are ten of those hobbies which are absolutely strange but becoming more popular by the day....

December 24, 2022 · 7 min · 1440 words · Albert Wethington

10 Strangest Things Found In Sewers

Now we simply press a button or pull a lever and we need never think of where our unwanted leavings go. However useful they are at collecting waste, sewers often pick up other unexpected items, too. Here are 10 of the weirdest things discovered in sewers. 10 A Rave What could be more fun than meeting up for a late-night dance in a secret location and going wild? Doing it in a sewer!...

December 24, 2022 · 9 min · 1790 words · Shaun Evans

10 Stunning Images Of Futuristic Architecture

The Khan Shatyr is already a reality! It is an immense transparent tent in the centre of Astana – the new capital city of Kazakhstan. It serves as both a cultural center and a place for social interaction amongst the city residents. The climate in Astana is rather harsh with winter temperatures dropping to -35c (-31F). The Nuragic and Contemporary Art Museum in Cagliari, Italy, ran a competition for the design of their new building....

December 24, 2022 · 3 min · 536 words · Jeremy Peery

10 Survival Tricks Used During The Holocaust

10Beet Juice The persecuted were starved and worked ragged in concentration and work camps, and they were also not given proper clothing. This made their bodies very pale and weak, like living skeletons. At the camp of Auschwitz, during medical examinations, the prisoners would use beet juice (and sometimes their own blood) to give their cheeks a blush tone to make them seem healthier. Should they fail the medical exam, they would be sent to death, so the “blush” in their cheeks gave them leverage over the doctors, tricking them into believing they were healthier than they truly were....

December 24, 2022 · 6 min · 1097 words · Denis Shultz

10 Technologies That Are Bringing Us Closer To Being Cyborgs

From ID-bearing microchips and contact lenses that do more than just fix your vision to smart bones and eyeballs, we have compiled a list of 10 technologies that are bringing us closer to being cyborgs. 10 Robotic Exoskeleton Roam Robotics and their president, Tim Swift, specialize in inflatable robotic exoskeletons. The company currently boasts two products on its website, Ascend and Forge. Ascend is designed as a medical device, while Forge is currently intended for consumer use....

December 24, 2022 · 9 min · 1738 words · Juana Smith

10 Terrible Decisions Of The 20Th And 21St Century

Though Harry Truman was under extreme pressure to end the war and reduce American casualties I think his decision to drop two atomic bombs on August 6th and August 9th, 1945 was in error. The Japanese were already defeated. According to Army Air Force General Henry H. (Hap) Arnold, “It always appeared to us, atomic bomb or no atomic bomb, the Japanese were already on the verge of collapse.” President Eisenhower declared in an interview with Newsweek: “…the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn’t necessary to hit them with that awful thing....

December 24, 2022 · 5 min · 1002 words · Mickey Pacheco