Site icon Peter A. Hovis

This discovery of the boy king fascinated the world

SEE TUT’S ENDURING POWER VIEW ONLINE
A CHANCE FIND LED
TO KING TUT
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
In today’s newsletter, we explore the accidental discovery of the boy king, see the Wales of Ryan Reynolds, find a steady food source for storks … and take the court for America’s fastest-growing sport.
PHOTOGRAPH BY HARRY BURTON
He sold watercolors to tourists on the Nile. His patron was an English nobleman with a love for ancient Egypt.

After the two labored for five years, a chance discovery led them to unearth the treasure-laden tomb of a legendary boy king, sealed for more than 3,000 years. In the two centuries since, Tutankhamun—King Tut—has fascinated the world (above, his golden effigy).

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PHOTOGRAPH BY PAOLO VERZONE
From Tut to Ramses: A 3,200-year-old statue of Ramses the Great dominates the atrium of the new Grand Egyptian Museum outside Cairo. The billion-dollar museum brings together for the first time nearly all 5,000-plus artifacts from Tut’s tomb. Read more.

Mummy Mia!
See Tut’s enduring power as never before
Tut’s 5,000 treasures, by the numbers
Find the many treasures hidden in Tut’s mummy
Just who was Tut?
The hole where Tut’s heart used to be
Egypt’s audacious plan to build a capital in the desert

OTHER STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Our bodies are unique. Our cancers are too. (Pictured above, a woman performs a breast self-examination to check for changes in the tissue. Self-examination accounts for about 65 percent of breast cancer discoveries.)
The Welsh town that Ryan Reynolds made famous
Has science solved one of history’s greatest adventure mysteries?
Mao, Stalin, Genghis Khan: The world’s biggest killers
One of Christianity’s earliest communities took hold and flourished—in Egypt
Wildfires can cause more intense storms hundreds of miles away
The ‘werewolf’ that horrified Europe
100 years ago this month: When fascism strong-armed its way to run Italy—and wrecked the country
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
PHOTOGRAPH BY MATT ROURKE, AP/SHUTTERSTOCK
They’re coming: At the epicenter of an invasion in Berks County, Pennsylvania, the spotted lanternfly (pictured above) is thriving: swarms fill the sky like a biblical plague while forests are blanketed in sticky discharge and mold. As the bug spreads with surprising speed, researchers are trying all types of mass-killing techniques on the invasive insect to save native wildlife—and protect wine grapes and beer hops from their straw-like jaws.
MAP OF THE INFESTATION
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY @JASPERDOEST
Steady dining: Open landfills may be ugly, but they’ve also changed migratory patterns for birds like the white stork. The stork used to be a wholly migratory bird, breeding in Europe and migrating come winter to Africa. But resident stork populations have emerged on the Iberian Peninsula, thanks to year-round landfill food supply. (Nat Geo Explorer Jasper Doest photographed this stork at a landfill in Portugal.)
LANDFILL LIVING
LAST GLIMPSE
PHOTOGRAPH BY KENDRICK BRINSON
Inside America’s fastest growing sport: Was it named after the dog Pickles? Or the mishmash boat in crew where leftover oarsmen form a “pickle boat”? In either case, pickleball—invented in 1965 by a group of bored children—is sweeping the country, with everyone from septuagenarians to prison inmates grabbing a paddle. (Pictured above, pickleball players in Arizona.)

GET THE PADDLES
Today’s newsletter was edited and curated by Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and David Beard. Readers, have you ever played pickleball? Like it? Let us know!
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