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Yesterday β€” 17 May 2024Main stream

Graffiti-covered door from French revolutionary wars found in Kent

17 May 2024 at 08:18
A scratched wooden door found by chance at the top of a medieval turret has been revealed to be an "astonishing" graffiti-covered relic from the French revolutionary wars, including a carving that could be a fantasy of Napoleon Bonaparte being hanged.

Over 50 individual graffiti carvings were chiselled into the door in the 1790s by bored English soldiers stationed at Dover Castle in Kent, when Britain was at war with France in the wake of the French Revolution. They include a detailed carving of a sailing ship, an elaborate stylised cross and nine individual scenes of figures being hanged – one of whom is wearing a bicorn hat. The simple plank door was first discovered several years ago at the top of St John's tower, which for more than a century had been impossible to access without climbing a ladder to the base of a spiral staircase. At the time, however, it was covered in thick layers of paint that obscured many of its markings.

tree of life of trees (flowers, really)

By: HearHere
16 May 2024 at 23:56
Old and improved, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew recently released a lovely tree of life of... well, plants [pdf].

But wait, there's also An unexpected noncarpellate epigynous flower from the Jurassic of China [pdf]. I was surprised that there was a controversy so ancient and about such fascinating beings: flowers. This is the first post I wanted to share with you all. Enjoy!
Before yesterdayMain stream

It becomes apparent there were at least three versions of the dough

By: chavenet
16 May 2024 at 15:42
Let's go back to December 1942, to the corner of Wabash and Ohio, to a small abandoned basement tavern that was also once a pizzeria named the Pelican Tap. The new tenants living directly above the abandoned tavern are a recently married couple with their newborn daughter. The 39-year-old father is the painter and restaurateur Richard Riccardo, owner of the famous Riccardo's Studio Restaurant on Rush Street. from The Secret History of the Original Deep-Dish Crust [Chicago]

Scholars discover rare 16th-century tome with handwritten notes by John Milton

15 May 2024 at 11:54
Annotation by John Milton citing Spenser on the recent history of Ireland

Enlarge / John Milton citing Spenser on the recent history of Ireland in his 1587 edition of Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles. Note Milton's italic e, hooks and curls on letters and distinctive s's. (credit: Phoenix Public Library)

John Milton is widely considered to be one of the greatest English poets who ever livedβ€”just ask such luminaries as John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Samuel Jonson, and Voltaire, who once declared, "Milton remains the glory and the wonder of England." But while Milton's own books continue to be widely read and studied, there are only a handful of books in collections today known to have been part of his personal library.

Add one more title to that small list, as scholars recently discovered a copy of Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland in the Phoenix Public Library, containing handwritten notes in Milton's distinctive hand. This makes the volume extra-special, since only two other books once owned by Milton also contain handwritten notes. The scholars detailed their findings in a new article published in the Times Literary Supplement.

Holinshed's Chronicles is a hugely influential and comprehensive three-volume history of Great Britain, first published in 1577; it was followed by a second edition in 1587. A London printer named Reginald Wolfe started the project and hired Raphael Holinshed and William Harrison to help him create a "universal cosmography of the whole world." Wolfe died before the book could be completed, and the project was eventually scaled down to a history of England, Scotland, and Ireland, complete with maps and illustrations.

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"Women in philosophy​ have always needed a special stroke of luck."

By: Kattullus
13 May 2024 at 15:02
Whenever I read claims about 'forgotten women', I want to ask: 'By whom?' Feminists? Society? The 'culture'? And why 'forgotten'? Forgetting presupposes something once known, but the general 'we' who have 'forgotten' these women are also the 'we' who were not taught them in the first place. Such generalisations risk shifting the focus, and the responsibility, away from the agents of our ignorance: the historians and philosophers who made a world in which certain texts were deemed unworthy of preservation and the history of women's thought was kept to the margins.
– A Comet that Bodes Mischief by Sophie Smith. She discussed women in philosophy on the LRB Podcast.

Why car location tracking needs an overhaul

13 May 2024 at 06:48

Across America, survivors of domestic abuse and stalking are facing a unique location tracking crisis born out of policy failure, unclear corporate responsibility, and potentially risky behaviors around digital sharing that are now common in relationships.

No, we’re not talking about stalkerware. Or hidden Apple AirTags. We’re talking about cars.

Modern cars are the latest consumer β€œdevice” to undergo an internet-crazed overhaul, as manufacturers increasingly stuff their automobiles with the types of features you’d expect from a smartphone, not a mode of transportation.

There are cars with WiFi, cars with wireless charging, cars with cameras that not only help while you reverse out of a driveway, but which can detect whether you’re drowsy while on a long haul. Many cars now also come with connected apps that allow you to, through your smartphone, remotely start your vehicle, schedule maintenance, and check your tire pressure.

But one feature in particular, which has legitimate uses in responding to stolen and lost vehicles, is being abused: Location tracking.

It’s time car companies do something about it. Β 

In December, The New York Times revealed the story of a married woman whose husband was abusing the location tracking capabilities of her Mercedes-Benz sedan to harass her. The woman tried every avenue she could to distance herself from her husband. After her husband became physically violent in an argument, she filed a domestic abuse report. Once she fled their home, she got a restraining order. She ignored his calls and texts.

But still her husband could follow her whereabouts by tracking her carβ€”a level of access that Mercedes representatives reportedly could not turn off, as he was considered the rightful owner of the vehicle (according to The New York Times, the husband’s higher credit score convinced the married couple to have the car purchased in his name alone).

As reporter Kashmir Hill wrote of the impasse:

β€œEven though she was making the payments, had a restraining order against her husband and had been granted sole use of the car during divorce proceedings, Mercedes representatives told her that her husband was the customer so he would be able to keep his access. There was no button she could press to take away the app’s connection to the vehicle.”

This was far from an isolated incident.

In 2023, Reuters reported that a San Francisco woman sued her husband in 2020 for allegations of β€œassault and sexual battery.” But some months later, the woman’s allegations of domestic abuse grew into allegations of negligenceβ€”this time, against the carmaker Tesla.

Tesla, the woman claimed in legal filings, failed to turn off her husband’s access to the location tracking capabilities in their shared Model X SUV, despite the fact that she had obtained a restraining order against her husband, and that she was a named co-owner of the vehicle.

When The New York Times retrieved filings from the San Francisco lawsuit above, attorneys for Tesla argued that the automaker could not realistically play a role in this matter:

β€œVirtually every major automobile manufacturer offers a mobile app with similar functions for their customers,” the lawyers wrote. β€œIt is illogical and impractical to expect Tesla to monitor every vehicle owner’s mobile app for misuse.”

Tesla was eventually removed from the lawsuit.

In the Reuters story, reporters also spoke with a separate woman who made similar allegations that her ex-husband had tracked her location by using the Tesla app associated with her vehicle. Because the separate woman was a β€œprimary” account owner, she was able to remove the car’s access to the internet, Reuters reported.

A better path

Location trackingβ€”and the abuse that can come with itβ€”is a much-discussed topic for Malwarebytes Labs. But the type of location tracking abuse that is happening with shared cars is different because of the value that cars hold in situations of domestic abuse.

A car is an opportunity to physically leave an abusive partner. A car is a chance to start anew in a different, undisclosed location. In harrowing moments, cars have also served as temporary shelter for those without housing.

So when a survivor’s car is tracked by their abuser, it isn’t just a matter of their location and privacy being invaded, it is a matter of a refuge being robbed.

In speaking with the news outlet CalMatters, Yenni Rivera, who works on domestic violence cases, explained the stressful circumstances of exactly this dynamic.

β€œI hear the story over and over from survivors about being located by their vehicle and having it taken,” Rivera told CalMatters. β€œIt just puts you in a worst case situation because it really triggers you thinking, β€˜Should I go back and give in?’ and many do. And that’s why many end up being murdered in their own home. The law should make it easier to leave safely and protected.”

Though the state of California is considering legislative solutions to this problem, national lawmaking is slow.

Instead, we believe that the companies that have the power to do something act on that power. Much like how Malwarebytes and other cybersecurity vendors banded together to launch the Coalition Against Stalkerware, automakers should work together to help users.

Fortunately, an option may already exist.

When the Alliance for Automobile Innovation warned that consumer data collection requests could be weaponized by abusers who want to comb through the car location data of their partners and exes, the automaker General Motors already had a protection built in.

According to Reuters, the roadside assistance service OnStar, which is owned by General Motors, allows any car driverβ€”be they a vehicle’s owner or notβ€”to hide location data from other people who use the same vehicle. Rivian, a new electric carmaker, is reportedly working on a similar feature, said senior vice president of software development Wassym Bensaid in speaking with Reuters.

Though Reuters reported that Rivian had not heard of their company’s technology being leveraged in a situation of domestic abuse, Wassym believed that β€œusers should have a right to control where that information goes.”

We agree.


We don’t just report on threatsβ€”we remove them

Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. Keep threats off your devices byΒ downloading Malwarebytes today.

Purple Reign

By: Rhaomi
8 May 2024 at 12:58
A rare archaeological object – thought to be the only one of its type in the former Roman Empire – has been discovered in Carlisle, England. The remnants of the Roman bathhouse at the Carlisle Cricket Club have revealed an extremely rare chunk of Tyrian purple dye, the first of its kind ever discovered in northern Europe and possibly the entire Roman Empire. [...] Known as "imperial purple," tyrian purple was an extremely valuable dye in ancient Rome because of its rich, vivid color, which denoted imperial authority, wealth, and status. It took a lot of resources and labor-intensive procedures to produce even small amounts, as it was made from thousands of crushed sea snails (Bolinus brandaris) from the Mediterranean. This rarity and exclusivity meant that it was more valuable than gold, sometimes up to three times as much by weight.
Fun fact: If a buyer wanted to know if there was something fishy about their exquisite dye, they could always see if it passed the smell test -- read the straight poop inside.

MeFite peeedro offers some amusing historical context from a 2019 post:
Tyrian purple dye works were famously odoriferous, as it was made from the liquid collected after thousands of crushed shellfish were left to putrefy in the sun. The rich purple producing cities of Tyre and Sidon were "unpleasant to live in" because of the smell according to Strabo even though the dye works were well outside of the cities. But, unlike a tannery, the finished Tyrian purple cloth smelled just as bad as the process that made it. "Neither the stink nor the color is reduced by washing; perfume would have been necessary to disguise the smell, even after washing and long periods of airing." Pliny the Elder called Tyrian purple "among the most abominable of odors" and wondered how something so smelly could be highly valued. The Roman poet insult comic Martial wrote a diss track full of misogyny and antisemitism about a particular woman saying, in part, that he would prefer to smell a "fleece twice dipped in Tyrian purple" than smell her. Smelling worse than double-dipped fleece of Tyrian purple was quite the sick burn of the day.
No word on if the archaeological find at Carlisle was still a smelly one.

Gmβ€’(t)-p3-itn

By: clavdivs
7 May 2024 at 17:44
Originally published in 1979, 'The Akhenaten Temple Project and Karnak Excavations' is a nice shapshot of the projects overview. "Akhenaten built the Gem-pa-Aten in the third year of his reign to celebrate his jubilee festival (the heb-sed). By year six of his reign, however, Akhenaten had moved the court and royal palace to a new city in Middle Egypt, modern Tell el-Amarna. The extent to which the Gem-pa-Aten and the other structures dedicated to the Aten at Thebes functioned during the king's hiatus is unknown." from Digital Karnak, A nice index for the history and archeology in Karnak. (Digital Karnak previously)

A careful analyst of the textured nature of historical repetition

By: chavenet
5 May 2024 at 04:40
Thucydides intimates that the careful art of drawing fitting analogies, honed as it may be through the diligent study of political history, will assist some to think more clearly about the present. But mastering this art should not be confused with political mastery. The power of 'great' events will remain too easily harnessed, and too hard to control, to serve only those who are clear-headed and well-intentioned. Specious analogies will remain a danger for as long as people stand to benefit from them, and their emotional pull will continue to knock even the most astute off balance. And yet, if there's little chance that political life will ever be freed from distortive thinking, it may still prove less hazardous for those who look toward history as something more than a sourcebook of convenient parallels. from What would Thucydides say? [Aeon]

Thucydides previously

Who lives in a pineapple under the sea?

By: Rhaomi
1 May 2024 at 18:55
You could call them "sky flowers," but that doesn't really make sense eitherβ€”after all, the faded blue behind each squiggle is water, not sky, and the squiggles themselves don't represent solid objects in any tangible, meaningful way. But they look right. The reds and greens and yellows add life and color in a way that a flat blue might not. Those odd shapes, suspended motionless with no clear reason or value, establish a tone. There are a lot of things that don't make sense on SpongeBob SquarePants. But there's a clear and coherent vision that runs through the entire show, from the design of SpongeBob's kitchen-sponge body down to the squeaky-balloon sound of his footsteps. It's a perspective, and a warm, specific, crazy little world. Of course it has sky flowers in it. What else would be up there?
Today marks 25 years since the original broadcast of "Help Wanted" -- the pilot episode of marine biologist Stephen Hillenburg's educational comic that became a delightful romp of "relentless optimism and fundamental sweetness", a hothouse flower of inventive and absurdist imagination, a cultural touchstone for multiple generations, and one of the most iconic and beloved animated franchises of the 21st century. Are you ready, kids?

Background Stephen Hillenburg, In His Own Words - "Compiled from various interviews, documentaries and other appearances, here is Stephen Hillenburg, talking about SpongeBob, his career, and more." Hillenburg's original educational comic, The Intertidal Zone, on the Internet Archive Hillenburg's death at age 57 from ALS led to an outpouring of grief and remembrance The original 1997 "story bible" SpongeBob Season 1 DVD Behind the Scenes The Oral History of SpongeBob SquarePants MeFi on the show's 10th anniversary ✏️ Animation ✏️ Spongebob Squarepants: The Art of the Gross-Up, a technique originally pioneered by Ren and Stimpy - see also: spongebobfreezeframes.tumblr.com Lovingly-curated Imgur galleries of all the matte-painting freeze-frame moments (notes):
Season 1: part one - part two - part three Season 2: part one - part two - part three - part four Season 3: part one - part two - part three - part four
(PS: Why so much focus on the first three seasons? Because Hillenburg left the show after the release of the first movie at the end of season 3, causing a noticeable decline in tone and quality.) ️ Voice Acting ️ The incredible voice cast has done plenty of table reads of key episodes (Help Wanted, Band Geeks, Shanghaied), not to mention dubbed classic cinema (previously), but most impressive are their fully-produced live-action skits: The Trusty Slab - More scenes Tom Kenny & Bill Fagerbakke Answer the Web's Most Searched Questions News you can use: How to do the SpongeBob laugh (Note that Kenny also doubled as series "host" Patchy the Pirate) ✍️ Essays + Articles ✍️ On The Postmodern Ethos Of "Spongebob Squarepants"
Like all postmodern "texts", Spongebob Squarepants doesn't deny the absurdity of existence. The show is filled with absurd and surreal moments, far too many to describe here. And as a postmodern show, Spongebob has its nihilistic moments as well. One in particular that stands out is from season three's episode "Doing Time", when Spongebob and Patrick attempt to break Mrs. Puff out of jail. After she refuses to leave, Spongebob wonders to Patrick if maybe she'd forgotten what it's like to "live in the outside world". The scene then cuts to a montage of typical postmodern malaise β€” a man (fish, rather) going to work, sitting in rush hour traffic, then gazing dejectedly out of his window as a woman asks if he's coming to bed. Depressing, hopeless, and completely nihilistic, this moment reminds viewers of their own mortality and the dangers of routine... or, if you're just a kid, you'll realize that being an adult can suck.
SpongeBob Made the World a Better, More Optimistic Place
On Monday, SpongeBob SquarePants creator Stephen Hillenburg died after a recent diagnosis with ALS. Nickelodeon confirmed the news on Twitter Tuesday afternoon. What followed was an outpouring of grief for the man behind one of the most recognizable and beloved cartoon characters of all time. [...] Through his show, Hilleburg was an evangelist of sorts for the unstoppable power of positive thinking, which he usually dramatized with absurd scenarios. Think of the time SpongeBob sculpts a perfect marble sculpture with a crack of the chisel, or when he wins a fast foodery face-off against the Flying Dutchmanβ€”the undead daddy of burger grillingβ€”with the special ingredient of love. SpongeBob tackles everything in lifeβ€”work, driving school, friendship, pain, lifeguarding, climate changeβ€”with a level of zealous breeziness usually reserved zen monks and six-year-old kids.
Memes Vox: How SpongeBob memes came to rule internet culture
It's hard to overstate just how popular SpongeBob SquarePants memes are. On Reddit, r/BikiniBottomTwitter β€” which exists mainly so that people can screencap the memes from Twitter and share them on Reddit β€” has more than 1.7 million subscribers, making it one of the site's most popular meme subreddits. (By comparison, the more general r/Spongebob subreddit only has 74,000 subscribers.) And SpongeBob memes don't just appear and then die; as Digg's editors noted in the site's 2018 SpongeBob retrospective, the biggest SpongeBob memes "are all pretty much meme superhits. There are no deep cuts here." What exactly is it about SpongeBob memes that make them so enduring and enjoyable?
SpongeBob SquarePants creator Stephen Hillenburg gave the internet language Revisit: A Chronology of SpongeBob Memes Tom Kenny and Bill Fagerbakke on Spongebob Meme Culture What's your favorite SpongeBob quote? Each Radiohead album described with SpongeBob -- just the first of a whole genre of video memes Music Songs:
Season 1: Opening Theme - Livin' In The Sunlight, Lovin' In The Moon Light - Ripped Pants - Jelly Fish Jam [CW: flashing lights] - The F.U.N. Song - Doing the Sponge - I Wanna Go Home Season 2: Loop de Loop - This Grill is Not a Home - Sweet Victory - Hey All You People - Hey Mean Mr. Bossman [Happy May Day, btw] Season 3: Striped Sweater - Electric Zoo - Underwater Sun - When Worlds Collide - You're Old - The Campfire Song Song
Plus a complete playlist of season 1's eclectic production music, including twangy ukelele, ragtime, traditional Hawaiian , whimsical Rakenhornpipe, and of course sea shanties like "What Shall We Do With the Drunken Sailor" Recaps + Retrospectives TVTropes' sprawling article on the series and recap of nearly the entire run Episode retrospectives:
Help Wanted (S1E1): Reimagined as a collaborative ReAnimation and as a black-and-white classic cartoon Pizza Delivery (S1E5): This Is What A Perfect Episode Of Spongebob Looks Like - A whole playlist of live-action remakes SB-129 (S1E14): How Spongebob Explored Existential Nihilism ("SB-129") Rock Bottom (S1E17): "Rock Bottom" reimagined as a Gothic claymation - Podcast discussion Hooky (S1E20): The Powerful Message In This Episode of Spongebob: Don't Get "Hooked" On Drugs Squirrel Jokes (S2E11): The Smartest Episode of Spongebob Squarepants (an Analysis) Shanghaied (S2E13): Live-action remake Band Geeks (S2E15): Band Geeks Is The Best Spongebob Episode - Band Geeks ReAnimated - the disappointing Super Bowl LIII cameo (and the improved LVIII version) Procrastination (S2E17): This SpongeBob Episode Will Make You Stop Procrastinating Sailor Mouth (S2E18): SpongeBob SwearPants: A Look At Moralization Of Swearing - Why "Sailor Mouth" Was So Controversial Squidville (S2E26): Spongebob's Darkest Episode Wet Painters (S3E10): Bubbles of Thought - Full storyboard recap Krusty Krab Training Video (S3E10): The Brilliance of Krusty Krab Training Video - Live-action remake Chocolate With Nuts (S3E12): Live-action (puppet!) remake Graveyard Shift (S3E24): How 'Nosferatu' turned up in SpongeBob SquarePants - Why a Painting of SpongeBob SquarePants Just Sold for $6 Million
The official YouTube playlist of 50 episode capsule summaries in 5 minutes ️ Clips ️ A grab-bag of memorable moments (via):
I DON'T NEED IT - How to blow a bubble - FIRMLY GRASP IT - 1% Evil, 99% Hot Gas - The gang's all here - We serve food here, sir - Krusty Krab Pizza - The pioneers used to ride these babies for miles - He's just standing there... MENACINGLY - Are there any other Squidwards I should know about? -Too hot... Too wet... Toulouse Lautrec - Everything is chrome in the future! - Photosynthesis -"MY LEG" - Advanced darkness - Steppin' on the beach - You used me... for LAND DEVELOPMENT - Stop starin' at me with them big ol' eyes - Have you finished those errands? - The story of the Ugly Barnacle - "No, this is Patrick" - Leif Ericsson Day - The boy cries him a sweater of tears, and you kill him - Ravioli Ravioli, give me the formuoli - Freeform jazz - That's OK, take your time - WHO ARE YOU PEOPLE - What I learned in boating school is... - Going on dry land - How does he dooo that? - DoodleBob - The inner machinations of my mind are an enigma - Is mayonnaise an instrument? - Flag twirlers - BIG... MEATY... CLAWS - That's his... eager face - Sweet Victory - Nosferatu! - - Sentence enhancers - Bold and Brash - MY NAME'S... NOT... RIIICK! - One Eternity Later... - Push it somewhere else - I'll remember you all in therapy - The Magic Conch - You like Krabby Patties, don't you, Squidward? - We've been smeckledorfed! - IMAGINATION - Wumbo - Smitty Werbenjagermanjensen - Striped Sweater - The French Narrator's time cards - Welcome to the Salty Spittoon, how tough are ya? - Weenie Hut, Jr.'s - The world's smallest violin - A clever visual metaphor used to personify the abstract concept of thought - Robots have taken over the world! - Spongebob and Patrick as parents - We're not cavemen -- we have technology! - HOOPLA! - Maximum Overdrive - It's time for the moment you've been waiting for - CHOCOLATE - Is your mother home? - Flatter the customer! - Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy - What do you normally do when I'm gone? - That's a 4/4 string ostinato in D minor! Every sailor knows that means death! - Are you feeling it now, Mr. Krabs? -
Episodes
And lastly, the first three classic seasons online (click to expand)S1E1: Help Wanted / Reef Blower / Tea at the Treedome S1E2: Bubblestand / Ripped Pants S1E3: Jellyfishing / Plankton! S1E4: Naughty Nautical Neighbors / Boating School S1E5: Pizza Delivery / Home Sweet Pineapple S1E6: Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy / Pickles S1E7: Hall Monitor / Jellyfish Jam S1E8: Sandys Rocket / Squeaky Boots S1E9: Nature Pants / Opposite Day S1E10: Culture Shock / F.U.N. S1E11: MuscleBob BuffPants / Squidward the Unfriendly Ghost S1E12: The Chaperone / Employee of the Month S1E13: Scaredy Pants / I Was a Teenage Gary S1E14: SB-129 / Karate Choppers S1E15: Sleepy Time / Suds S1E16: Valentines Day / The Paper S1E17: Arrgh! / Rock Bottom S1E18: Texas / Walking Small S1E19: Fools in April / Neptunes Spatula S1E20: Hooky / Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy II S2E1: Your Shoes Untied / Squids Day Off S2E2: Something Smells / Bossy Boots S2E3: Big Pink Loser / Bubble Buddy S2E4: Dying for Pie / Imitation Krabs S2E5: Wormy / Patty Hype S2E6: Grandmas Kisses / Squidville S2E7: Prehibernation Week / Life of Crime S2E8: Christmas Who? S2E9: Survival of the Idiots / Dumped S2E10: No Free Rides / Im Your Biggest Fanatic S2E11: Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy III / Squirrel Jokes S2E12: Pressure / The Smoking Peanut S2E13: Shanghaied / Gary Takes a Bath S2E14: Welcome to the Chum Bucket / Frankendoodle S2E15: The Secret Box / Band Geeks S2E16: Graveyard Shift / Krusty Love S2E17: Procrastination / Im with Stupid S2E18: Sailor Mouth / Artist Unknown S2E19: Jellyfish Hunter / The Fry Cook Games S2E20: Sandy, SpongeBob, and the Worm / Squid on Strike S3E1: The Algaes Always Greener / SpongeGuard on Duty S3E2: Club SpongeBob / My Pretty Seahorse S3E3: The Bully / Just One Bite S3E4: Nasty Patty / Idiot Box S3E5: Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy IV / Doing Time S3E6: Snowball Effect / One Krabs Trash S3E7: As Seen on TV / Can You Spare a Dime? S3E8: No Weenies Allowed / Squilliam Returns S3E9: Krab Borg / Rock-a-Bye Bivalve S3E10: Wet Painters / Krusty Krab Training Video S3E11: Party Pooper Pants S3E12: Chocolate with Nuts / Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy V S3E13: New Student Starfish / Clams S3E14: Ugh S3E15: The Great Snail Race / Mid-Life Crustacean S3E16: Born Again Krabs / I Had an Accident S3E17: Krabby Land / The Camping Episode S3E18: Missing Identity / Planktons Army S3E19: The Sponge Who Could Fly (The Lost Episode) S3E20: SpongeBob Meets the Strangler / Pranks a Lot
β™«β™ͺ

The Cleveland Museum of Natural History Seeks New Ways to Engage Visitors

By: John Hanc
27 April 2024 at 05:02
The Cleveland Museum of Natural History is rolling out two new exhibition halls and making its scientists more accessible. And don’t forget the dinosaurs.

Β© Daniel Lozada for The New York Times

β€œHappy” (short for Haplocanthosaurus delfsi), a 70-foot-long, 14-foot-high sauropod, dominates the newly renovated main visitor hall at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History β€” and serves as the museum’s logo.
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