PHOTOGRAPH VIA U.S. NAVAL HISTORY AND HERITAGE COMMAND
It is one of the most striking artifacts from the attack on Pearl Harbor—a sleek, black, 76-foot-long, 40-ton Japanese submarine captured in Hawaii during World War II.
Now America’s first WWII trophy (shown above after it beached in the Pacific) sits deep in the landlocked heart of Texas. Wait, what?
How did this massive relic end up in the Texan hill community of Fredericksburg?
What country is this? Stunning mountains, veiled by clouds. Trees, pastureland, humble shelters. Can you guess where this was taken? Click here for the answer.
Flower power: Sunflower pollen can vanquish parasites in bumblebees—but until recently, scientists didn’t know how. That was until PhD student Jonathan Giacomini took a close look at the poop from “medicated” bees. Under a black light, he says, “It was very dazzling—it almost looked like a galaxy.” And, there was a a lot of it, leading to his surprising find, Nat Geo reports. (A common eastern bumblebee gathers pollon on a sunflower, above.)
HUNGRY, HUNGRY… Hippos may be herbivores—eating up to 110 pounds of grass each night—but they’re still one of the most dangerous animals in the world (above, a hippo in South Africa’s Kruger National Park). A hippo bite is nearly three times stronger than a lion’s and can cut a person in half with one chomp. Humans survive hippo encounters only 13.3 percent of the time.
We hope you liked today’s newsletter. This was edited and curated by Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, David Beard, and Mallory Benedict. Have an idea or a link for us? Write david.beard@natgeo.com. Happy trails!
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