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Archive for the tag “Origins Explained”

Lost Cities Uncovered

From towns hidden under a hill to the possible site of the legendary Atlantis, Origins Explained examines eight mysterious lost cities that have recently been uncovered.

Among the archaeological gems is a small community in Antarctica, known as Little America. In October 1933, the first American post office in Antarctica was established at a base camp on the Ross Ice Shelf. Established in 1928 by U.S. naval officer Richard E. Byrd, the settlement even had its own newspaper.

But perhaps the most interesting site in this video is Akrotiri, located on the Greek island of Santorini. The port city was an important urban and trade center, boasted a sophisticated drainage system, elaborate architecture and even housed some of the world’s first indoor bathrooms. Because Akrotiri was so highly advanced, some scholars theorize it represents the lost city of Atlantis, mentioned in Plato’s writings. The city was eventually buried by the second-largest volcanic eruption in human history.

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Frozen In Ice

From long-dead, pre-historic viruses to extinct creatures found for the first time, Origins Explained features 10 amazing animals and organisms found frozen in ice.

As we all grapple with the realities of the coronavirus pandemic, it seems absolutely insane that anyone would want to revive a long-dead virus. But that’s exactly what happened in 2014, when a team led by evolutionary biologist Jean-Michel Claverie revived two viruses that were found frozen 100 feet underground in the Siberian permafrost.

In another amazing discovery in 2018, a team of paleontologists found a mummified horse foal in the 328-foot deep Bataiga Crater during an expedition in eastern Siberia. Its skin, hooves and tail were still intact, thanks to the frozen conditions preserving the young creature’s remains. Tune in for eight more amazing discoveries.

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Crazy Things Snakes Swallowed

When hunger pangs strike, snakes will eat almost anything. Take the hungry reptile who slithered into a Gainesville, Fla., backyard and devoured not one, but two 15-watt lightbulbs, each three times the size of the snake’s head.

When property owners saw the snake, they noticed two large bulges in its body as if it were pregnant with twins. The homeowners admitted that they discarded the bulbs from their chicken coop and the snake mistook them for eggs.

In the following video, Origins Explained features 10 of the craziest things that were found in the bellies of snakes.

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Wild Animals Rarely Seen

From prehistoric-looking birds to the new generation of felines, Origins Explained features a variety of wild animals that have rarely been seen.

One of the weirdest is the shoebill stork, quite an intimidating bird that appears to be a creature right out of a 1990s animated movie. These large birds have a very direct look on their faces and are native to the wetlands of Central and East Africa. Then there’s the extremely rare bracken bat cave meshweaver spider, which hadn’t been spotted for 30 years until 2012, when a cave full of them was discovered in San Antonio, Texas. They measure the size of a dime and are harmless, mostly surviving in underground caves. Tune in for more rare species on Origins Explained.

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Sci-Fi Weapons That Exist

From deadly laser beams to plasma forcefields, Origins Explained features nine mind-blowing futuristic weapons that actually exist and tell us the future is now.

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Weird Creatures Of the Deep Sea

Some of the creepiest and most bizarre creatures can be found at the bottom of the famed Mariana Trench, located in the western Pacific Ocean at an incredible depth of 36,201 feet. Perhaps the weirdest is the telescope octopus, which cruises the trench at anywhere from 500 to 6,500 feet below the surface. The eyes are the first thing you notice on the octopus. They stick straight up through the sockets, which is how it got its name. Origins Explained features nine other strange inhabitants of the Mariana Trench.

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Frozen in Time

There’s more going on in Siberia than you think. In 2007, receding ice in the Kolyma River revealed another prehistoric specimen in the woolly rhinoceros, ancestor to today’s Javan rhino. The combination of its weight combined with short legs pushed the rhino deeper into snowdrifts and into lakes and rivers, leading to its ultimate extinction. In this edition of Origins Explained, host Katrina Maree counts down the 10 most amazing animals who suffered similar fates.

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