• YUBNUB.NEWS
    4 Democrats Aim for GOP Congressmans New Jersey Seat
    New Jersey Republican Rep. Tom Kean Jr. greets voters during a block party in Berkeley Heights, N.J. Courtesy of Tom Kean for CongressThe race to unseat Republican incumbent Tom Kean Jr. in New Jerseys
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  • WWW.UNIVERSETODAY.COM
    Were Martian Tides Strong Enough to Shape its Ancient Landscape?
    Youre an anaerobic microbe sunbathing on a Martian beach billions of years ago listening to the small waves hit the shoreline as you take in the perchlorates in the Martian regolith. This is because while Mars is warm and wet, it still lacks sufficient oxygen, so anaerobic life like yourself doesnt need oxygen to survive. Youre chilling for several hours and eventually notice the water hasnt touched you. You remember over-hearing some otherworldly fellows who briefly landed and discussed the landscape didnt look well formed, so they left.
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  • WWW.THECOLLECTOR.COM
    How Imperialist Ambitions Sparked World War I in 1914
    How did imperialism lead to World War I? The First World War officially began in 1914 and ended in 1918, but its seeds were sown long before the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo in the summer of 1914. The murder of Archduke Ferdinand in his car was the straw that broke the camels back, emphasizing and amplifying the political and economic tensions that had been building up for decades between the European powers, particularly Britain, France, and Germany. The declaration of war was the direct result of years of aggressive imperialism and boiling nationalism, particularly in the Balkans, where Slavic Serbs were increasingly seeking independence from the Habsburg and the Ottoman Empires. Indeed, the Archduke of Austria was assassinated in Sarajevo by a Serbian nationalist, Gavrilo Princip.The Year is 1914The Signing of the Treaty of Peace at Versailles, 28 June 1919, painting by Joseph Finnemore, 1919. Source: National Museum of AustraliaWhen 20-year-old Gavrilo Princip (1894-1918) gunned down Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria (1863-1914) and his wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, in the streets of Sarajevo, now the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina, on June 28, 1914, the world was still divided into empires and colonies. Four years and millions of dead and wounded later, the Great War was over. So were four huge empires that had ruled over thousands of people for centuries. One of them was the Habsburg Empire, also known as the Austro-Hungarian Empire or the Dual Monarchy. When the war ended, it was carved up into a constellation of different countries. Vienna, the glorious capital of the Empire, became the capital of a small state, Austria, and the most vivid symbol of the disintegration of the Habsburg Monarchy. The collapse and dissolution of another great power, the Ottoman Empire, already in serious decline, was sanctioned by the Treaty of Svres signed in August 1920.Members of the Romanov family, including Anastasia Nikolaevna (the first from the left) in Mogilev. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe Russian Empireor Romanov Empire, after the House of Romanov, the Imperial House of Russia from 1613 to 1917also crumbled, leading to the rise of the Soviet Union (USSR) in 1922 and the independence of former territories, such as Finland, Poland, and the three Baltic states: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Under the Treaty of Versailles (1919), the German Empire, or Hohenzollern Empire, after the Hohenzollern Dynasty, was stripped of all its overseas possessions in Africa, China, and the Pacific, which were ceded to Britain, France, and Belgium.The Treaty of Versailles essentially singled out Germany as the sole power responsible for the Great War and punished it by largely reducing its territory on European soil. As per Articles 42 and 44, the Rhineland, a loosely defined region extending along the Rhine River in what is now Western Germany, was demilitarized.Airplane in flight during World War I, 1915-1918. Source: Art Gallery of OntarioAlsace-Lorraine was returned to France and Northern Schleswig to Denmark. Parts of Upper Silesia, West Prussia, and the province of Posen were assigned to the newly restored Polish state. The humiliation was immense and set the stage for the rise of Hitler and the outbreak of the Second World War just a few decades later. But how did the world end up in a four-year war that resulted in millions of deaths and the collapse of four major empires? The causes, both direct and indirect, of the First World War are a well-explored topic in historical studies. Here we look at just one of them: imperialism.A World of ColoniesChromolithograph celebrating the French conquest of Tonkin, 1885. Source: Wikimedia CommonsIn the years leading up to the First World War, the European powers had carved out and consolidated their spheres of economic and cultural colonial dominance across the globe. The two major powers were France and Great Britain. On the eve of the Great War, France ruled over much of North Africa, from present-day Morocco to Tunisia and Algeria, as well as various regions in both East and West Africa, such as modern-day Chad and Burkina Faso, and islands such as Madagascar and Runion.France began its conquest of Algeria in 1830. 50 years later, in 1881, it annexed Tunisia, while Morocco only became a French protectorate in 1912. From the 1860s, France also ruled over large parts of Asia, known as French Indochina, and had territories in Oceania, from so-called French Polynesia to various smaller islands.Nigeria was ruled by the British until 1960, when it became independent, photograph by Omotayo Tajudeen. Source: UnsplashBritain, on the other hand, after occupying (but not annexing) Egypt in 1882, took control of Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan, Uganda, Rhodesia, Sierra Leone, and British Somaliland, officially the Somaliland Protectorate. Italy annexed Eritrea in 1885, Somalia in 1889, and finally Libya in 1911, while the Germans ruled over Togo, Cameroon, and Namibia. Until the 1970s, Portugal controlled Angola and Mozambique and Belgium ruled the Congo with an iron fist.In the so-called Scramble for Africa, British possessions stretched vertically, from north to south, from the northern coast of Egypt to the last strip of land in South Africa. French possessions, on the other hand, stretched from west to east (or east to west), in a long and large belt of influence that covered almost the whole of West Africa (with important exceptions such as Nigeria and Cameroon) all the way to Madagascar.Between Alliances and TensionsThe Algeciras Conference, 1906. Source: Wikimedia CommonsAlthough they are distinct phenomena, colonialism and imperialism are animated by what Barbara Arneil, author of Colonialism versus Imperialism, calls a central thread, or a central set of comprehensive arguments/principles that seek to justify the right of one power to subjugate another. In other words, imperialism is about influence, mainly through economic control and diplomacy, and the extension of the power of one (European) nation over another, with the latters citizens usually described in colonial propaganda by a handful of interrelated terms: uncivilized, idle, backward, and barbaric.In this race for dominance, European alliances were formed and tensions were heightened in the years leading up to the outbreak of the Great War. Tensions and alliances that would dominate the course, and outcome, of the conflict, while highlighting the precarious political balance of power on the European continent.The old city walls of Tangier, Morocco, 1930s. Source: Royal Museums GreenwichIn some cases, they led to territorial disputes that consolidated old alliances against a common enemy (Germany) while contributing to a general climate of threat and mistrust. This was the case with the Moroccan Crises. France was already ruling Algeria and Tunisia when it turned its attention to Morocco, one of the last free and uncolonized regions in North Africa.In March 1905, Kaiser Wilhelm II (1859-1941) traveled to Tangier, the ancient strategic Phoenician city and commercial center in north-western Morocco. From his yacht, he delivered an inflammatory speech, emblematic of the tensions between the European powers, declaring that Morocco should retain its right to its self-government and independence. France (and its allies) saw this as a threat to its claims. The crisis subsided a year later at the Algeciras Conference (1906), with Britain and Russia supporting France and its claims over Morocco (although the country remained independent), leaving Germany not only politically isolated but also openly humiliated.Kaiser Wilhelm II, 1902. Source: Wikimedia CommonsTensions peaked again five years later, when Germany sent its gunboat Panther to Agadir in July 1911, sparking what became known as the Second Moroccan Crisis. Germanys show of force represented a threat not only to France (and Spain, who also had interests in Morocco) but also to the supremacy of the British navy.The Treaty of Fez signed on March 30, 1912, put an end to the crisis by making Morocco a French protectorate. In return for its willingness to recognize French control over the Arab country, Germany was granted a small strip of land in the French Congo. For the time being, war in Europe had been averted. But when the treaty was made public in mid-April, the people in Fez rose up and riots broke out. Abd al-Hafid (1875-1937), the Alaouite sultan of Morocco, abdicated and left for France.From Ideologies to MilitarizationThe Battle of Port Arthur on 10 March 1904, during the Russo-Japanese War, by Ogata Gekko, 1904. Source: Queensland Art Gallery (QAGOMA)While colonialism involves the physical, methodical, and often violent occupation and administration of territory by colonial officials, imperialism is a different kind of domination. It is a domination from above and afar, which does not necessarily require direct settlement or occupation. It could be argued that imperialism represents the overarching ideology of colonialism, and colonialism is its physical implementation.Since 1415, when Portugal conquered Ceuta in North Africa, and especially after 1492, when Christopher Columbus (1451-1506), reached the American continent, European powers began to act on this ideology by securing colonies around the globe. Then, to protect their colonies, trade, and the stability of their empires, they began to expand their armies and navies, investing in more advanced machine guns and artillery, such as the German Big Bertha (Dicke Bertha in German), a siege howitzer built in great secrecy by the Krupp armaments factory in Essen and designed in the aftermath of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904.HMS Dreadnought, 1906. Source: Wikimedia CommonsA shipbuilding arms race between Russia and Britain, now known as the Anglo-German Dreadnought arms race, soon began. The spark came on a wet February day in Portsmouth, where the worlds media gathered to witness King Edward VII (1841-1910) launch the innovative royal battleship HMS Dreadnought (literally Fear Nothing), built in just one year. It was clear to all that Britains newest warship was a revolutionary piece of technology that would ensure the supremacy of the British navy over all other European fleets and make all previous warships obsolete.The colonies also provided a pool of men to be recruited in the event of conflict, as was the case in both the First and the Second World Wars. The colonies were both a resource to be protected (through the arms race) and a force that could provide protection and help in the event of war. By this logic, the arms race was not only necessary but inevitable.Portrait of Winston Churchill, by Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1955. Source: National Churchill MuseumIt was the duty of every European power to defend its subjects, knowing (and expecting) that these subjects would rise up to defend them if necessary. In his famous We Shall Fight speech, delivered after the evacuation of Dunkirk in June 1940, Winston Churchill (1874-1965), then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, famously concluded that even if, which I do not for a moment believe, this Island or a large part of it were subjugated and starving, then our Empire beyond the seas, armed and guarded by the British Fleet, would carry on the struggle, until, in Gods good time, the New World, with all its power and might, steps forth to the rescue and the liberation of the old.The arms race inevitably escalated tensions and contributed to the climate of fear, suspicion, threat, and hatred that led to the Great War.The Domino EffectSoldier wearing a gas mask in a dugout during the First World War, 1915-1918. Source: Art Gallery of OntarioThe territorial disputes and the arms race created a domino effect that contributed to the outbreak of the First World War. To protect their interests, the imperial powers established formal alliances. The United Kingdom, the French Third Republic, and the Russian Empire formed the Triple Entente, which served as a powerful and threatening counterweight to the Triple Alliance.This alliance, originally established in the early 1880s and renewed periodically, included Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. Germany, in particular, perceived the Triple Entente as a threat not only to its economic interests but to its very survival. Such a system of alliances formed the basis of the two opposing sides fighting during the First World War, the Allied (or Entente) and the Central Powers.Soldiers of the 1st Battalion of the West Yorkshire Regiment in Egypt, 1931-1933. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe Central Powers included Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria, while the Allied Powers consisted of France, the United Kingdom, and Russia, later joined by the United States (in 1917, the same year when the crumbling Russian Empire withdrew from the war), Japan, and Italy.A factor that further escalated the conflict was the so-called German blank check, that is, Germanys offer of unconditional and full military support to its Austro-Hungarian ally made by Kaiser Wilhelm II and Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg in July 1914. Historians now generally agree that the German blank check had the ultimate effect of emboldening Austria-Hungary, pushing it to take a hardline stance against Serbia and anyone supporting it. As Gerwarth & Manela write, On the eve of the Great War much of the landmass of the inhabited world was divided into formal empires or economically dependent territories. That world unraveled dramatically in the twentieth century, beginning with the cataclysm of the First World War.Inside the trenches of World War I. Source: National WWI MuseumWhen Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia, backed by the German blank check assurance, the complex web of alliances that had developed over decades came into play. These alliances, partly fueled by imperial ambitions, compelled European powers to join the conflict. As each European nation became involved, their respective colonies also entered the conflict.Alongside the Allied powers fought troops from British India, French Algeria, Japanese Korea, Belgian Congo, and the American Philippines. On the other hand, several officially neutral states sided with the Central Powers. And so the conflict that began in the streets of Sarajevo in the summer of 1914 expanded to become a war fought by millions of men from all over the globe: the Great War, or, as it is known today in retrospect, the First World War.
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  • ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COM
    A Six-Year-Old Boy On A Field Trip Just Pulled A 1,300-Year-Old Viking Sword From A Field In Norway
    Cultural Heritage of Inland/FacebookArchaeologists believe that the sword dates back 1,300 years, to the very beginning of the Viking Age.A typical school field trip recently turned into a life-changing experience for a six-year-old boy in Norway. Henrik Refsnes Mrtvedt was visiting a farm near Tingelstad with his first-grade class when he spotted something sticking out of a plowed field. He reached down to pick it up and pulled a 1,300-year-old sword from the soil.The weapon dates back to the early Viking Age, and young Henrik will soon be able to see his discovery on display at one of his countrys most prestigious museums.How A Six-Year-Old Found A Viking SwordIn late April 2026, first-grade students from Norways Fredheim School took a field trip to nearby Rkstad Farm. The children were walking through a plowed field when six-year-old Henrik saw a piece of metal in the dirt.He grabbed the object and discovered that it wasnt just a small piece of debris it was an intact sword.Avisen Hadeland/FacebookHenrik stumbled upon the sword during a field trip to a local farm.This part was sticking out, Henrik explained as he pointed to the swords hilt in a video posted by the Norwegian newspaper Hadeland. It was rust and soil. So I thought I would pick it up and see what it was.Henrik showed his teachers what hed found, and they immediately alerted officials at the Inland County Municipality. Archaeologists have since studied the artifact and determined that it dates back roughly 1,300 years, when Vikings still ruled the region.Norway During The Early Viking AgeExperts believe the sword is from the earliest years of the Viking Age, during Scandinavias Merovingian Period. Little is known about this time in Norway, making the discovery all the more exciting.The weapon is whats known in Norwegian as an enegget, or a single-edged sword. Analysis is still ongoing, but archaeologists hope that X-rays and a closer study of the metal will reveal how the sword was constructed and who may have used it.If the weapon does indeed date back to the late eighth century C.E., it was crafted just as the Vikings first began raiding the British Isles and mainland Europe. Most historians agree that the Sacking of Lindisfarne in 793 marks the official beginning of the Viking Age. During this infamous raid, Norsemen attacked a monastery off the coast of England, slaughtering monks and seizing sacred treasures.According to English Heritage, Northumbrian scholar Alcuin of York wrote at the time, The church of St. Cuthbert is spattered with the blood of the priests of God, stripped of all its furnishing, exposed to the plundering of pagans.Cultural Heritage of Inland/FacebookThe enegget lying in the plowed field where Henrik spotted its hilt.The raiders likely wielded weapons like the enegget found by Henrik to carry out their massacre. Further analysis at the Cultural History Museum in Oslo, where the sword will be held for now, may tell experts more about what this particular weapon was used for. But for now, archaeologists are simply thrilled about this rare insight into the life of the early Vikings.The sword joins a host of other recent discoveries from the time of the Norsemen. Just weeks before Henrik unearthed the weapon, metal detectorists in eastern Norway stumbled upon the largest Viking coin hoard ever found in the country. And in 2024, archaeologists uncovered 1,100-year-old jewelry on another Norwegian farm.Whats more, melting ice has revealed Viking treasures in Norways Jotunheim Mountains, and in 2017, a reindeer hunter discovered a 1,200-year-old sword of his own about 80 miles north of Tingelstad.These artifacts join countless other relics that have been recovered over the centuries, revealing what life was like for the people who lived in Norway during one of the most fascinating periods in world history. As such, Henriks sword isnt just an unexpected souvenir from a school trip its a piece of his countrys cultural heritage.After reading about the Viking sword that was unearthed by a schoolboy in Norway, see 11 more archaeological discoveries made by children. Then, discover the astonishing stories of 13 famous Vikings.The post A Six-Year-Old Boy On A Field Trip Just Pulled A 1,300-Year-Old Viking Sword From A Field In Norway appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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    The AirPods' Environmental Problem Nobody Talks About
    Apple is working hard to be a carbon-neutral company, but there is one big environmental problem with the AirPods that nobody is talking about.
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    5 3D Printer Brands You Should Steer Clear Of, According To Users
    Don't buy an outdated or low-quality 3D printer. Discover which 5 brands are being flagged by the maker community for poor results and difficult maintenance.
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    Medicares new payment model is built for AI, and most of the tech world has no idea
    There is no governmental mechanism to pay for an AI agent that monitors a patient between visits, calls to check in, coordinates a housing referral, or makes sure someone picks up their medication. ACCESS creates that mechanism for the first time.
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  • What A Watermelon's Shape Reveals About Its Taste & Texture
    What A Watermelon's Shape Reveals About Its Taste & Texture...
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    The morality of the state and its limits
    [View Article at Source]Cutting Through the Chaos with Wallace Garneau Modern politics increasingly confuses personal morality with the responsibilities of government. By collapsing distinctions between
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    What A Watermelon's Shape Reveals About Its Taste & Texture
    With so many watermelon varieties to choose from, make note of a melon's shape. Whether it's round or oblong, the shape can indicate its taste and texture.
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