
The Great Emu War: How Birds Beat the Australian Military
In 1932, the Australian military marched into Western Australia armed with Lewis machine guns and 10,000 rounds of ammunition. Their target was not a human enemy but a flock of 20,000 flightless birds...
24 Kesä 38min

The Somerton Man: Cracking Australia's 70-Year Beach Mystery
A well-dressed man is found dead on an Adelaide beach in 1948, every label cut from his clothing, an untraceable poison in his system, and a scrap of Persian poetry sewn into his trousers. For more th...
24 Kesä 24min

The Demon Core: Two Deaths and a Slipping Screwdriver
A scientist in blue jeans and cowboy boots leans over a sphere of plutonium capable of leveling a city, prying apart two reflector shells with the blade of an ordinary screwdriver. This is the true st...
24 Kesä 44min

The Wow! Signal: 72 Seconds That Still Haunt SETI
In August 1977, a radio telescope nicknamed Big Ear caught a 72-second roar of radio noise so striking that astronomer Jerry Ehman circled it in red pen and wrote 'Wow!' in the margin. Decades later, ...
24 Kesä 1h 1min

The Bone Wars: How Spite Built Modern Paleontology
Two brilliant, wealthy scientists once hired armies of frontier workers to spy on each other, throw stones across ravines, and dynamite priceless fossils into dust, all to spite a rival. This deep div...
24 Kesä 49min

The Radium Girls: How Glowing Paint Rewrote Worker Rights
In the 1920s, young women painted glowing radium onto watch dials and, for fun, onto their fingernails and teeth, told the miracle element was perfectly safe. It was killing them. This deep dive tells...
24 Kesä 20min

The Great Molasses Flood: 2.3 Million Gallons at 35 MPH
On a January afternoon in 1919, a massive storage tank in Boston's North End burst, sending 2.3 million gallons of molasses surging through the streets at 35 miles per hour. The wave hurled a truck in...
24 Kesä 20min



















