Books
The Baghdad Battery
Archaeologists found clay jars in Iraq containing copper cylinders and iron rods that produce electrical current when filled with acidic liquid, and if they're really batteries, they prove ancient civilizations had technology we thought was impossible until the modern era.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in History
The Book Nobody Can Read
Yale University's library contains a 240-page medieval manuscript filled with unknown plants, bizarre astronomical diagrams, and mysterious text written in a language that has defeated every code-breaker, linguist, and artificial intelligence program ever created.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in History
Lake Vostok
Beneath Antarctica's ice sheet lies a lake the size of Lake Ontario that has been completely isolated from Earth's surface for 15 million years, and when Russian scientists drilled down to it in 2012, they discovered life forms that shouldn't exist.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in History
The Black Forest Hunter. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
A Horror Story in Ten Parts Part One: The Illusion - Evening crept through the trees of the forest like a frightened shadow, and the fog thickened like the breath of hidden creatures lurking behind the ancient oak trunks. Khalid stood at the edge of the woodland he had frequented for forty years, but today he felt something different. Something was watching him. Not from inside the forest, but from behind him. From the village.
By youssef mohammedabout 15 hours ago in History
Nuclear Shock: Iran Tests a Bomb
Nuclear Shock: Iran Tests a Bomb The Middle East has entered a new and dangerous phase of geopolitical tension. Reports and speculation about nuclear capabilities in Iran have intensified fears across the globe. As conflict escalates between Iran, Israel, and the United States, the possibility of nuclear weapons development has become a central concern for international leaders and security analysts.
By Wings of Time a day ago in History
Ancient Super Weapons That Changed Warfare Forever
Throughout recorded history, warfare has shaped civilizations. Long before drones, missiles, and cyber warfare, ancient societies were already engineering terrifying and brilliant machines designed to dominate the battlefield.
By Areeba Umair2 days ago in History
Argentina Unearths the Remains of a Giant Prehistoric Titan
In a remarkable scientific discovery, paleontologists working in Argentina have uncovered the fossilized remains of what is believed to be one of the earliest giant dinosaurs to walk the Earth. The discovery was made in the windswept region of Patagonia, an area long known for its rich fossil deposits. The newly discovered dinosaur is thought to have been a massive plant-eating species that roamed the planet nearly 200 million years ago.
By Irshad Abbasi 2 days ago in History
Ancient Stone ‘Gates’ Unearthed in Saudi Arabia Rewrite Prehistoric History
Here’s a complete English article (approx. 700 words) with a title and subtitle based on the recent news about the discovery of thousands‑year‑old “gates” in Saudi Arabia’s desert Archaeologists and researchers have uncovered an astonishing prehistoric landscape hidden beneath the deserts and lava fields of western Saudi Arabia — one marked not by cities or temples, but by hundreds of enigmatic stone structures resembling monumental “gates.” These formations, visible in satellite imagery and confirmed through field surveys, offer fresh insight into ancient human activity on the Arabian Peninsula, challenging long‑held assumptions about where and how early peoples lived, traveled and interacted with their environment. 
By Irshad Abbasi 3 days ago in History
Mummified Body Found in Coffin Believed Empty for 150 Years
For more than 150 years, a coffin thought to be empty sat in silence, dismissed as a symbolic burial vessel or an archival mistake. Historians, caretakers, and local researchers had long assumed it held no human remains at all. But that belief was dramatically overturned when a recent examination revealed something no one expected: a mummified body carefully preserved inside.
By Irshad Abbasi 3 days ago in History
The Reluctant Nationalist
In the turbulent history of South Asia’s struggle against colonial rule, few figures stand as uniquely as Abdul Ghaffar Khan. Known to many as the “Frontier Gandhi,” Khan was a Pashtun leader who devoted his life to nonviolence, social reform, and the dignity of his people. Yet what makes his story even more remarkable is that he was often described as a “reluctant nationalist.” Rather than chasing political power or personal glory, Abdul Ghaffar Khan saw nationalism as a responsibility forced upon him by the suffering of his people.
By Irshad Abbasi 4 days ago in History
Playbill Pulse : Joe Turner’s Come and Gone Preview-Cedric the Entertainer Challenges Himself on Broadway by NWO Sparrow
Joe Turner’s Come and Gone: Cedric the Entertainer’s Challenging Broadway Role by NWO Sparrow Exploring the discipline, silence, and emotional depth required to bring Joe Turner’s Come and Gone to life
By NWO SPARROW4 days ago in History








