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Was Napoleon a ‘good’ dictator? Plus, Bertie Gregory’s deep sea adventures, a lake of bones, Iceland’s erupting volcanoes

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HOME SWEET… TRASH? VIEW ONLINE
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ARE ALL DICTATORS ‘BAD’?
Tuesday, July 25, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we question if Napoleon was an enlightened leader or a tyrant, learn how Death Valley got its name, eat more foods with omega-3s … and discover a mysterious twist in a lake of bones.
PHOTOGRAPH BY SERGIO RAMAZZOTTI
Is there such a thing as a good dictator? Napoleon Bonaparte (reenacted above) modernized the law and civil service from the ashes of feudalism and the French Revolution. The soldier-turned-emperor seized territory and glory, but ultimately lost both and sacrificed a generation on the battlefield.

He also reintroduced slavery. One historian says to celebrate Napoleon, the topic of an upcoming movie, “is to suggest that the people whose lives he destroyed actually don’t matter.”

WHAT IS HIS LEGACY?
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STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY HIMADRI SINHA ROY
DNA study deepens mystery of lake full of skeletons(Above, the bones of up to 800 people scattered across the shores in the Himalayas)
How omega-3 fatty acids reduce inflammation
Home sweet… trash? The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is teeming with life
If you’ve felt like people are getting crueler, you may be right
Inside the growing U.S. movement to breed healthier, friendlier dogs
Botox to treat depression and anxiety?
How did this musical genius go from superstar to has-been to icon?
Prehistoric female hunter discovery upends gender role assumptions
What is the best time to sleep—and why do we need so much?
A strike threatened to cripple Hollywood in 1960. Here’s how they resolved it.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
VIDEO BY BERTIE GREGORY
Adventures better than ever: Immersed in schools of fish. Running with hyenas. Climbing peaks of mountains. Nat Geo Explorer Bertie Gregory doesn’t shy away from nature’s best—and captures it all for us to see. His new show streams in September. See the trailer here.
MORE ABOUT BERTIE
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY KARIM ILIYA/VERB PHOTO
River of fire: Rising up and spilling over, Iceland’s volcanoes are once again erupting. An aerial view shows the Litli Hrútur eruption, taken just two weeks ago, creating a fiery river stretching across the land.
WHERE THE VOLCANO BLOWS
LAST GLIMPSE
PHOTOGRAPH BY RAUL TOUZON, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Feeling hot, hot, cold? This place holds the record as the hottest place in the world—in 1913, it apparently reached 134°F. Death Valley, however, didn’t get its name from the blistering heat—but from a winter disaster. (Pictured above, the Mesquite Sand Dunes in Death Valley National Park.)
WHAT HAPPENED?
Today’s soundtrack: The Bones, Maren Morris and Hozier

Thanks for reading our newsletter! As always, it was edited and curated by Jen Tse, Hannah Farrow, Nancy San Martín, and David Beard. We’d love to hear from you:
hannah.farrow@natgeo.com. Enjoy the rest of your week!
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