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Can this Titanic rescue work? Plus, a Russian spy whale; Viking’s Disease; what Adderall does to people without ADHD

ADDERALL AND RITALIN VIEW ONLINE
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PUTIN’S BABY BELUGA
Tuesday, June 20, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we question if this whale is a Russian spy, figure out what Adderall and Ritalin really do to us, visit Saint Sara for World Refugee Day … and continue to look for the missing Titanic submersible.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY RICH GERMAN

He’s a friendly beluga whale nicknamed Hvaldimir (pictured above). He likes humans. When he splashed onto the scene in 2019 off northern Norway, he carried a Russian-produced camera harness.

Was Hvaldimir a Kremlin spy?

Now he’s on the move again, farther south, past Oslo and into Swedish waters.

HE MAY BE IN DANGER
Unlock this article with Nat Geo Premium! Get access now to exclusive stories, plus a century of archives, photos, and videos. See subscription options starting at just $19/yr.
 
Determined to interact: Hvaldimir actively seeks out human companionship. It’s an unusual behavior he may have learned in a military training program. Read more.
STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID DOUBILET, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Is Ursula from ‘The Little Mermaid’ an octopus? Sort of.(Above, a cuttlefish)
6 urgent questions on the missing Titanic submersible
If you don’t have ADHD, Adderall and Ritalin won’t work for you
What really attracts mosquitoes—and how to repel them
You may be overlooking this nutritional powerhouse. You shouldn’t.
The controversial quest to bring back the Tasmanian tiger
Is the Illuminati still powerful?
Disease spread. Native tribes were displaced, murdered. This is how the Gold Rush transformed California
Neanderthals brought a disease to the Vikings—and to us
Why are human skulls still being sold online?
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
ILLUSTRATION BY JACOPIN, BSIP/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Understanding a ‘lost world’: Without these complex cells, there would be no fish, flowers, mushrooms—or us. Yet we’re only learning about how far back these organisms go–it may be 1.6 billion years. Here’s what surprises a new study found about the origin of these organisms, known as eukaryotes (illustrated above).
HOW WE BEGAN
WHERE IN THE WORLD?
PHOTOGRAPH BY KARTHIK SUBRAMANIAM
National American Eagle Day: A bald eagle arrives to steal a perch on a tree log that offers a strategic view of the shoreline. Where is it?

A. Oregon
B. Florida
C. Alaska
D. Maine

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT
WORLD REFUGEE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY GODONG, UNIVERSAL IMAGES GROUP/GETTY IMAGES
A banned saint—and a protector of the people: She’s many things to many people: the daughter of Jesus, an Egyptian handmaiden, a fierce warrior of creation and destruction. But to the Roma nation, Saint Sara-la-Kali is a patron protector—and thousands of Roma travel every year to visit the small village where she’s believed to have arrived on shore. (Above, a Roma pilgrim embraces a statue of Santa Sara.)
LEARN MORE
We asked, you answered: Thanks to readers who wrote in after Friday’s newsletter on fighting heatstroke. “Your article helped me convince my younger compatriots that their ‘tough it out’ approach was dangerous,” writes Mary Henry. “I did not know that it is better to sip water throughout the day. I also did not know that if the body does not get sufficient cool down during the night, then the body is far less able to handle extreme heat during the day,” wrote Katherine Levin.

Today’s soundtrack:

Steal The Show, Lauv

Thanks for reading our newsletter! It was edited and curated by Jen Tse, Hannah Farrow, Nancy San Martín, and David Beard. We’d love to hear from you:
david.beard@natgeo.com. Keep shining!
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