What We Love This Week, Volume CXXXIX

Published September 11, 2015

The Ferocious Beauty Of Iceland’s Volcanoes

Swedish photographer and geologist Frederick Holm has spent years hunting down volcanic eruptions across Iceland. Why someone would spend so much time in such a forbidding place doing such dangerous work becomes abundantly clear when you see the raw, ferocious beauty of these volcanic eruptions up close. Holm has captured smoke plumes that look as if they’ve come from a painter’s brush, sparks that outdo any fireworks show we could ever create, and lava flowing off mountainsides just like a waterfall. For more, visit The Washington Post.

Meet Humankind’s Newly Discovered Ancestor

Deep within a South African cave, more than 100 years from its entrance, in a small chamber nearly blocked off by a crawl space just ten inches high and a rock formation known as the Dragon’s Back, researchers have found a new human ancestor that changes the story of our evolution. The newly discovered Homo naledi is just different enough from our other ancestors to warrant its own new species name. At nearly five feet tall with a rather small brain and ape-like shoulders for climbing, H. naledi offers a glimpse of a kind of primitive human that we had not yet seen. Researchers are already claiming that this new species complicates what we thought we knew about our evolutionary tree. To find out just how and why, go to National Geographic.

Primitive Human Ancestors Corpse

An artist’s rendering of the H. naledi group disposing of a member’s corpse in a cave. This is thought to be the reason the remains were found where they were. Image Source: news.nationalgeographic.com

Primitive Human Ancestors

Three of humankind’s most important ancestors, from left: “Lucy,” “Turkana Boy,” and H. naledi. Image Source: news.nationalgeographic.com

Japan Under Water

Japan Flooding Aerial

Image Source: www.theatlantic.com

More than 100,000 people were forced from their homes on Friday as flood waters tore through the Tochigi and Ibaraki prefectures, north of Tokyo. Following heavy rain caused by Typhoon Etau, rivers in these prefectures burst their banks and unleashed devastation throughout the region. Massive amounts of evacuees have already been lifted out by helicopter and taken to shelters as officials warn that further flooding and mudslides are still to come. See the destruction up close at The Atlantic.

Building Topples Flood Japan

A hotel building falls into the floodwaters at the Nikko mountain resort in Tochigi Prefecture, north of Tokyo. Image Source: www.theatlantic.com

Japan Flood Houses

Image Source: www.theatlantic.com

author
John Kuroski
author
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.
Cite This Article
Kuroski, John. "What We Love This Week, Volume CXXXIX." AllThatsInteresting.com, September 11, 2015, https://allthatsinteresting.com/what-we-love-this-week-volume-cxxxix. Accessed April 23, 2024.