In 1972, astronaut Charles Duke left behind a picture of his family on the moon's surface. It's been there ever since:
The back of the photo reads "This is the family of Astronaut Duke from Planet Earth, who landed on the Moon on the twentieth of April 1972."
This is what salt looks like under an electron microscope:
This is what Chile looks like compared to Europe:
This is what Netflix's homepage looked like in 1999, one year after launch:
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This is how big a moose is compared to a van:
This is what a gym looked like two centuries ago in 1831:
Mars is home to the tallest mountain in the solar system, the 72,000 foot tall Olympus Mons:
It's over 372 miles wide. That's bigger than Arizona.
Here's a computer illustration of what Olympus Mons looks like from space:
This is the iconic log cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born in 1809:
This would sell for $19 million in Lake Tahoe today.
Easter bunnies were absolutely horrifying in the 1950s:
This picture from 1957 will forever haunt my dreams.
Fingers with nerve damage won't prune:
This is the Antonov An-225 Mriya, the largest plane in the world:
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Last week I shared some new photos NASA's James Webb Space Telescope took of Uranus. Here's another new picture, this time of Neptune:
This is what a medieval toilet looked like on the inside of a castle...
... and this is what it looked like on the outside:
This is a picture of a lifeboat filled with Titanic survivors being rescued and brought aboard the Carpathia following the sinking of the ship:
This is what a kidney stone looks like under an electron microscope:
"Yes hi I need my windshield replaced, someone smashed it with something. Oh it's completely covered by my mandatory insurance? Perfect..."
If it is smashed in 100 % of the cases the owner of the car is at fault.
They have Force meter implemented and you can easily determine who is at fault.
Spoiler Idiots who try to get it Off without the correct Magnetic key
So you say someone's car gets vandalised and they are at fault? That's not how most insurance plans I've ever seen work. And the force meter tells who threw the brick or swung the hammer? That's some amazing force meter... The tire boot worked much more effectively and was far harder to bypass. This is just a way for cities to get more money from people while having to pay fewer employees.
Yeah, this is a really, really bad idea. That trap is built into the toilet for a very good reason.
And note that there is no toilet paper holder...
100 year old "historic" building - lol!