Latest posts

The Brief And Exciting Pirate Life Of Calico Jack

On: Monday, April 13, 2026

Calico Jack
John Rackham, is popularly as Calico Jack Rackham, was a pirate operating in the Golden Age of Piracy during the early 1700s.

He was considered one of the most luminary pirates in history, including Edward "Blackbeard" Teach and Edward England, who have used colorful aliases. Calico Jack was most remembered for having two female pirate crew members: Anne Bonny and Mary Read, who were considered the fiercest members of his crew.

Unlike his contemporary Blackbeard, Calico Jack Rackham seemed to go out of his way to refrain from the typical barbarism of a pirate. His most noteworthy exploit involves returning a ship, intact and unharmed, to the unfortunate captain he had just robbed blind. In fact, this uncharacteristic restraint is Rackham's claim to fame; otherwise, he was a mostly small-time pirate who commanded a single, small sloop rather than an armada full of buccaneers.

Despite the superstition—that women bring bad luck on ships—that many sailors of his time shared, the most celebrated members of his crew were female pirates Anne Bonny and Mary Read.

As chance would have, the two women, both masquerading as men, met aboard Rackham's ship. Anne Bonny married a sailor called Jack Bonny, who was a rather useless sailor but took her out to Nassau, where she fell in love with a much more dashing Calico Jack.

Rackham gave his lover Anne Bonny, destined to become one of the greatest woman pirates of all time, her first taste of the sea. Mary Read joined a merchant ship, went out to the West Indies in the Caribbean, where the merchant ship was captured by Calico Jack.

Anne, who was married to Calico Jack, fell in love with Mary but found out she also was a woman disguised as a man. A devoted friendship bloomed between the two women, who eventually achieved notoriety in a daring, two-woman, pistol-and-cutlass defense of the ship against English privateers. So there was Calico Jack with the two women onboard who were by far the fiercest members of his crew.

Later in his pirate career, Calico Jack Rackham was sailing off the coast of Jamaica, where he was intercepted by Captain Jonathan Barnet, a privateer and pirate hunter who had been sent out to capture pirates. Calico Jack and his crew were all captured, sent to the capital of Jamaica, where a trial took place as his entire crew was tried for piracy. All the men were hanged, but the women got off because they both managed to get pregnant, and the authorities couldn't hang a woman with an unborn child because the child was innocent.

At some point after his death, the flag commonly associated with Calico Jack Rackham, depicting a skull above crossed swords on a black background, became the primary Jolly Roger of Hector Barbossa.

There were also reports of a rivalry between Calico Jack and that other great pirate of the same first name, Jack Sparrow, which were entirely unfounded—although it was easy to imagine a little friction between the two.

Read More......

Bizarre Puzzle Behind The Sunken Ship

On: Sunday, April 12, 2026

HMS Tyger
After the British warship HMS Tyger ran aground on a coral reef near Garden Key, Florida, on 13 January 1742, even dumping its cannons overboard couldn’t set it free. Decades later, those same cannons helped archaeologists definitively identify the wreck.

The ship, which was on patrol as part of the War of Jenkins’ Ear between Britain and Spain, is 130 feet in length and represented 704 tons of patrol power, with 50 cannons scattered across three decks.

The 300-plus men on board sailed near Cuba and Jamaica as a show of force to the Spanish. That force lost its momentum when it hit the coral reefs of the Florida Keys, leading the crew to toss anchors and cannons overboard to no avail and forcing them to abandon the ship toward Garden Key, where they built shelter as the island’s first fortifications.

In 2024, the history of the HMS Tyger and Garden Key came back to life thanks to a positive identification of the ship. "Archaeological finds are exciting, but connecting those finds to the historical record helps us tell the stories of the people that came before us and the events they experienced," James Crutchfield, Dry Tortugas National Park manager, said in a statement. "This particular story is one of perseverance and survival."

The ship was initially discovered in 1993, but archaeologists from the park, the Submerged Resources Center, and the Southeast Archaeological Center used newly uncovered evidence — found when the site was surveyed in 2021 — to gain more details and make a positive identification of the ship.

The team found five cannons roughly 500 yards from the main wreck, and buried in the margins of old logbooks was a reference that described how the crew "lightened her forward" after initially running aground, briefly refloating the vessel before finding further trouble.

Archaeologists determined the cannons to be British six- and nine-pound cannons linked to the HMS Tyger. The findings were published in the International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.

As governed by international treaty, the HMS Tyger and related artifacts are sovereign property of the British government, and the site is protected under cultural resource laws.

"This discovery highlights the importance of preservation in place as future generations of archaeologists, armed with more advanced technologies and research tools, are able to reexamine sites and make new discoveries," Josh Marano, the maritime archaeologist who led the team making the discovery, said in a statement.

Believed to have first been built in 1647, the HMS Tyger was reconfigured multiple times before the 1741 iteration carried six 6-pounder guns on the quarter deck, 22 9-pounders on the upper deck, and 22 18-pounders on the gun deck, according to the National Park Service.

Those heavy guns were unloaded when the ship ran aground in 1742 in an effort to dislodge the ship. The crew moved everything else to the back of the ship. Historical records say poor weather helped worsen the situation, and the crew was ordered to abandon ship.

Archaeologists believe the HMS Tyger was the first of three British warships to sink off the Florida Keys. The HMS Fowey and HMS Looe wreck sites were previously located, but the HMS Tyger location had remained a mystery.

The 300 members of the crew were able to navigate the shallow waters to the nearby Garden Key, spending 66 days marooned there. The National Park Service stated the men crafted the first fortifications on the island, more than 100 years before Fort Jefferson took shape.

The crew was eager to leave the heat, mosquitoes, and lack of water, attempting to escape the deserted island by trying to salvage pieces of the wrecked ship and build new vessels. The crew even attempted an attack on a Spanish vessel, according to historical records. That attempt failed, and the crew decided to burn the HMS Tyger remains so the Spanish didn’t capture the guns.

Read More......

What Happened To The Two Groups Of Humans That Vanished 3,000 Years Ago?

On: Saturday, April 11, 2026

Burial Mound
There is a strange gap in the contents of a 5,000-year-old megalithic tomb outside Paris may explain not only a widespread neolithic population drop, but also who stepped in to repopulate the Paris Basin.

The Bury tomb, roughly 30 miles north of Paris, is a stone burial monument containing the remains of 300 people. Using a combination of DNA and demographics, researchers investigating the tomb believe they’ve found out why the Paris Basin suffered a dramatic population shift around 3100 B.C.E., and just who entered the region to take their place.

In a new study published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, an international team of researchers link the Paris-region stone-age site to a massive continent-wide demographic crisis.

Prior to the mysterious population decline, megalithic tomb construction defined the wide-reaching area for over 1,000 years. While each region put its own cultural touches on funerary construction, the tombs at Bury were consistent, communal, and housed tens of thousands of burials over centuries. The Paris Basin featured an especially high concentration of such tombs, as did central Germany and southern Scandinavia.

According to the new research, construction of these tombs abruptly "ceased across continental northwestern Europe" at the end of the fourth millennium B.C.E. The break in the millennial burial tradition happened everywhere — and until now, the reason remained unknown.

The investigation of the Bury megalith revealed that it represented two distinct phases of burials — the first was from roughly 3200 to 3100 B.C.E., and the second began around 2900 B.C.E. The 200-year gap in which there were no burials coincided with a wave of population losses across northern Europe, a neolithic decline that researchers haven’t fully understood, but which contributed to a complete remaking of populations in the area.

By examining DNA evidence from 132 individuals found in Bury, the team discovered that the two distinct historical phases were unrelated. Phase one individuals had a genetic diversity extending well beyond the Paris Basin, tied to farming populations across the continent. Phase two burials, on the other hand, were substantially more homogeneous, with over 80 percent of the group’s ancestry traced to neolithic Iberia (what is now Spain and southern France).

The burial styles were even different, with phase one burials featuring multi-generational families and evidence that women married into the community from the outside, while phase two burials included smaller families and unrelated individuals buried next to each other. With distinctly different Y chromosome lineages in the second phase, this wasn’t a gradual cultural shift, but a dramatic population turnover.

Paired with pollen data (which shows forests were regrowing during the gap) and a shift in farming practices after the gap, the turnover signals the abandonment of grazing lands and fields, implying that settlements were vacant. The pattern that matches the aftermath of the Justinian Plague and the Black Death.

The authors argue that the 3100 B.C.E. decline was geographically widespread, creating a demographic vacuum across northwestern Europe that opened the door for neighboring populations to fill in the void. In Scandinavia, steppe pastoralists replaced local farmers entirely. In the Paris Basin, Iberian farmers moved into the then-empty spaces.

"We may thus consider the possibility that both the Iberian northward migration and the expansion from the steppe were related responses to the Neolithic decline," the authors wrote, "as widespread demographic contraction would have created a vacuum that neighboring groups could expand into."

The first community that defined the Paris Basin was essentially erased, but clues to what caused the erasure were found in the Bury tomb. Researchers discovered ancient pathogens — including the plague and louse-borne relapsing fever — in the remains.

Experts believe that infectious disease, environmental stress, and demographic contraction all led to the widespread demographic collapse. "These findings detail a population turnover at the end of the fourth millennium B.C.E.," they wrote, "offering a possible explanation for the cessation of megalith building."

Read More......

Fossils from China Revealed The Other Side Of Evolution

On: Friday, April 10, 2026

Fossils In China
Archaelogist found a goblet-shaped sea jelly relatives with miniature "arms." A plump, legless creature resembling a sausage. Long, wormlike animals tipped with flat "holdfast" discs for anchoring to the seafloor.

Newfound fossils from a site in southwestern China, preserved in exquisite detail, offer a peek at a time in Earth’s distant past called the Ediacaran (635 million to 542 million years ago). The discovery suggests that complex animals — perhaps even ancestors of all vertebrates — were around millions of years earlier than once thought.

A few types of creatures were previously known from the Ediacaran, but the evolution of complex animal life has long been associated with the Cambrian, a later period from 542 million to 488 million years ago when fauna diversity and complexity were booming.

During the Cambrian explosion, animals with a wide range of bizarre structures and adaptations emerged. Some groups died out, but others eventually gave rise to modern animal groups such as chordates, crustaceans and mollusks. Because the Cambrian fossil record preserves so much animal diversity, scientists have long hypothesized that complex animal life didn’t yet exist during the Ediacaran.

However, the fossils from China tell a different story. These boneless organisms fossilized as biofilm — they were rapidly buried and compressed between layers of rock, leaving behind two-dimensional impressions of their organic tissues. Animals’ entire bodies were preserved. Feeding structures, delicate limbs and even traces of internal organs, which are typically lost during fossilization, are still visible.

For the first time, scientists have highly detailed examples of animals from the latter part of the Ediacaran. What an international team of researchers saw suggests that complex animal life arose around between 554 million and 539 million years ago — at least 4 million years before the Cambrian, they reported recently in the journal Science.

"We found what’s been long hoped for, which is a Cambrian-like preservation in the Ediacaran," said study coauthor Ross Anderson, an associate professor of natural history at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. "We actually start to see some of the Cambrian-like organisms appearing in the Ediacaran when you have the right kind of preservation."

Researchers found the fossils at the Jiangchuan Biota fossil site in what’s now China’s Yunnan province. The site measures just 518 square feet (50 square meters), covering roughly the same area as a dozen king-size mattresses. Scientists from China and then the UK excavated approximately 700 fossils during multiple visits between 2022 and 2025. About 200 of these specimens represented animals, many measuring less than an inch (2.5 centimeters) long.

Read More......

Remains Of One Of The Largest Christian Monasteries Was Discovered

On: Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Monastery
Egypt often brings to mind visions such as the Sphinx, Tutankhamun’s iconic gold death mask, or pyramids casting long shadows over the Giza Plateau, but life went on after the last of the pharaonic dynasties vanished. It was the dawn of a new era.

After the advent of Christianity, religious beliefs in Egypt shifted, and with it, the megalithic statues of gods from the old pantheon gave way to new churches and monasteries rising up from the sands. More of them are now being unburied.

After the rule of the Ptolemies ended, Egypt found itself in a tumultuous transitional period. Christianity was brought to the former land of the pharaohs by Saint Mark the Evangelist around 49 C.E. Christianity became more widespread under the leadership of Bishop Demetrius of Alexandria almost 200 years later, though its followers faced persecution under Roman rule until Emperor Constantine declared it the state religion in 312 C.E.

Theological scholars flocked to Alexandria for centuries, though competition with the newer Christian capital of Constantinople (now Istanbul), along with controversies over religious doctrine, led to Egyptian Coptic Christians breaking from the Roman Catholic Church and the Greek Orthodox Church during the 5th century C.E. Coptic art and culture continued to flourish despite the rift.

While excavating at the Al-Ruba’iyat area of the Al-Qalaye site in Hosh Issa, archaeologists discovered what is now thought to be one of Egypt’s oldest monasteries, dating back to the 5th century.

Monasteries were beginning to turn into epicenters of Christian learning, opening their doors to visitors, and moving away from the sometimes-brutal asceticism followed by early monks, which demanded isolation and extreme discipline. As archaeologists dug through the dust and sand, the remains of the monastery at Al-Qalaye revealed thirteen rooms divided by architectural arches, including individual and communal spaces for monks, kitchen and storage areas, and larger halls used for teaching and hospitality. The archaeological team also noticed that there had been several additions to the structure as its evolution continued over time.

Earlier archaeological missions at the site had also found clusters of monastic cells or "manshubiyat" along with service buildings and pottery. The monastery bustled with activity in its prime.

Led by archaeologist Samir Rizq Abdel-Hafez, the excavation project found a spacious hall on the north end, with stone benches decorated in plant motifs, which were probably used for receiving guests. At the heart of the complex was a sacred prayer room marked by a limestone cross.

Bones of birds and other animals, seashells, and pottery vessels meant for food storage showed what the monks ate on a daily basis. The monks spent their entire lives practicing devotion. They were also likely buried on site, as evidenced by a headstone carved from limestone with a Coptic inscription reading "Apa Kyr, son of Shenouda."

The mission has also yielded many preserved remnants of Coptic art, including walls covered in murals of monks framed by intricate braided patterns that had been painted in red, black, and white shades that faded over the centuries. There was more inspiration from the natural world on display in images of gazelles surrounded by foliage and distinctive flowers with eight petals. Fragments of ceramics are painted with similar motifs, and deeper digging exposed a marble column along with capitals and bases of other columns.

Hisham El-Leithy, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, sees the monastery as giving further insights into Coptic art and architecture. Another mission from the Council previously came upon an older architectural complex from the period when Egypt segued from paganism to Christianity.

Located at the Ain al-Kharab site, it held ruins from the city of Kharga Oasis, including churches, cemeteries, and residential buildings, as well as a mural of Christ healing a sick person. Both the city and the monastery will continue to tell us more about early Coptic culture and art as more structures and artifacts are discovered.

Read More......