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How did these explorers vanish?

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Tuesday, January 24, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we follow the disappearances of five famous explorers, see how dogs may help us reverse aging, explore a possible alternative to opioids, discover Sudan’s pyramids … and take Nat Geo’s courtyard quiz.
PHOTO COURTESY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, GETTY IMAGES

Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett set out to find the Lost City of Z. Then he vanished.

Sir John Franklin was chasing the elusive Northwest Passage; George Mallory, the top of Mount Everest; and Amelia Earhart, a flight around the world. All of them disappeared into thin air.

Little by little, new clues to their fates are emerging.

Read the full story here.

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PHOTOGRAPH VIA ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY

New evidence: Explorers are still searching for these lost pioneers—sometimes to their peril, as with several ill-fated attempts to track Fawcett. Even as expeditions recover bodies (like George Mallory’s, pictured above without a hat) and possible bones from Earhart (pictured at top), questions remain. Read more.
STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID GUTTENFELDER
Dogs could be our best hope to reverse aging in humans(Joe Pup receives an echocardiogram during an anti-aging study.)
Clothing from 1600s shipwreck shows how the 1 percent lived
‘1619 Project’ comes to Hulu, expanding the story of enslaved Africans
No, redheads aren’t going extinct. Here’s why.
‘Fire of Love’ was nominated for an Oscar. Meet the woman who inspired the documentary.
How mud homes are expertly designed to beat the heat
A possible new solution to chronic pain—and the opioid crisis
A wildlife first: World’s biggest ocean stingray tagged in the wild
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
PHOTOGRAPH BY MAREK MIS, SCIENCE SOURCE
Viruses are… food? An estimated 10 nonillion (10 to the 31st power) viruses exist on Earth and until recently, scientists assumed that their submicroscopic size left them out of the food chain. A new study, however, found that a single-celled microbe (similar to the one above) can survive on viruses alone, likely eating hundreds of trillions of them a day in the wild. The finding may change how we understand the carbon cycle, Nat Geo reports.

Related:

Viruses on Earth outnumber stars in the universe. Why do only some infect us?
A TINY VIRUS SNACK
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY NICHOLE SOBECKI, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
More pyramids than Egypt: Nat Geo Explorer Nichole Sobecki was in Meroë photographing Sudan’s best-preserved pyramids when a sandstorm hit. “Watching the wall of sand move toward us across the desert, amid the echoes of ancient kings and queens, was a moment I’ll never forget,” she says. Sudan is home to twice as many pyramids compared to Egypt.

Related: How the Nubian kingdom of Kush exuded power and gold

HOW TO SEE THEM
WHERE IN THE WORLD?
PHOTOGRAPH BY MIENEKE ANDEWEG-VAN RIJN, ALAMY
Where is this courtyard? Medieval pilgrims braved quicksand and tides to reach this holy place. Today it’s France’s second most popular tourist destination outside of Paris. As the site enters its millennium year, it’s adopting sustainable practices to protect its future. Where is it?
DO YOU KNOW?
Today’s soundtrack: Lost in Yesterday, Tame Impala

We hope you liked today’s newsletter. This was edited and curated by Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and David Beard. Have an idea or a link for us? Write

sydney.combs.-nd@natgeo.com. Happy trails!
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