20 live long to see the old **: including a young mammoth that was excavated about 40,000 years ago; The launch of Perkins' manned kite for reconnaissance during World War I.
1) Juvenile mammoths excavated about 40,000 years ago: Photographed in 1977, a miner's bulldozer inadvertently excavated a juvenile mammoth in the permafrost of Siberia. It lived about 40,000 years ago and he died at the age of 6-8 months with his mother's milk still in his stomach.
2) During World War I, at Camp Devens in Ayr, Massachusetts, Lieutenant Kirk Booth of the U.S. Signal Corps took to the skies on Perkins manned kites used for reconnaissance, which were used by the French on the Western Front in Europe.
3) When Egypt was colonized by the British, with the digging of the Suez Canal, a large number of Western rich and explorers poured into Egypt, without any protection of the pyramids, tourists can climb at will, and some even climb all the way to the top of the pyramids, drink tea and **sunset on it....
4) Albina was a Slovenian fighter who was wounded in battle several times during World War II. She joined the People's Liberation Movement at the age of 16, was wounded twice at the age of 17 and was injured by a landmine three days after her 18th birthday. For the rest of the war, she continued to fight and served as **, and she lived until she was 75 years old.
5) This is one of Michelangelo's masterpieces, Moses, and it is a marble sculpture made between 1513 and 1515. One of the many details of this masterpiece is a very small muscle in the forearm, this muscle of the human body contracts only when the little finger is raised, otherwise it is invisible. And Moses is raising his little finger, which shows Michelangelo's knowledge of the structure of the human body.
6) In 1996, a newborn baby girl was thrown in a trash can near the city of Kolkata, India. Three friendly stray dogs found and protected her for almost two days, even trying to feed the child before contacting the authorities.
7) In 1731, King Frederick I of Sweden's favorite pet lion died, so he sent a taxidermy to make a taxidermy for the lion, and this is what he received.
8) During World War I, a soldier joined the army with a pet baboon.
9) A man driving a wheeled motorcycle, 1931.
10) In 1945, a German woman sits alone in the ruins of Cologne, with her dog and all her belongings.
11) Dina Sanichar was found walking on all fours and eating raw meat after being raised by wolves. He continued to live with other humans for more than twenty years, but never learned to speak. Sanicha is a big smoker. He died of tuberculosis in 1895.
12) One-legged German World War I veteran begging on the streets of Berlin, Germany, 1923.
13) The size of the blades of the wind turbine is beyond your imagination, but what is even more unexpected is that a sudden tornado actually tore the wind turbine blades in Texas into twist-like pieces in the picture below.
14) Hitler, a group photo of the whole class when he was in the fourth grade of elementary school, and the one in the middle of the last row is the future Führer.
15) Atomic Bomb Girl, Lee Merlin, winner of the "Miss Atomic Bomb" pageant in Las Vegas in the 1950s, not only is the dress in the shape of a "cauliflower", but the crown is also a mushroom cloud.
16) George Stimney, who was executed at the age of 14 for being accused of killing two white girls. It was 70 years before a judge in South Carolina proved his innocence. Until the day he was executed, he also had a Bible in his hand, claiming that he was innocent because he was too small and the electric chair was too low, so the prison guards used the Bible he carried with him to raise the seat.
17) Princess Fatme Hanum, the daughter of the 19th century Iranian king Nasser al-Din Shah, an Iranian woman at that time, with thick eyebrows and a beard is actually a sign of beauty. It is said that there were hundreds of people who pursued her, and 13 young men died because of unrequited love.
18) John Wojtowicz, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 1972 for robbing a bank to pay for his wife Eden's sex reassignment surgery. Later, his deeds were adapted into the movie "Hot Afternoon". John was a blessing in disguise, receiving $7,500 and a 1% royalty on the film's net profits, which he later gave to his wife, Eden, to have sex reassignment surgery done, but Eden died of AIDS in 1986.
19) In 1946, when a Polish woman was taking a portrait, the photographer had to replace the background with a canvas because the city was still in ruins after World War II.
20) At the end of World War II, American movie star Marlene Dietrich kisses a returning soldier with the help of everyone. In 1944 and 1945, she performed for the Allies in Algeria, Italy, England and France. Some say she was even closer to the front than Eisenhower.