Tag Page Usa

#Usa
Curiosity Corner

The Unique Blond-Haired People of Melanesia In the Solomon Islands, a small population has a rare trait: dark skin with naturally blond hair. Roughly five percent display full blond hair, and about one in four carry the genetic variant. This trait comes from a change in the TYRP1 gene, which affects hair pigment but not skin. It is distinct from European blond hair and evolved independently. The same variant is less common in nearby islands. Importantly, this gene affects hair color only and does not directly change eye function, lung capacity, or physical performance. These communities are known for strong swimming and diving skills. Many can hold their breath for one to two minutes and dive several meters without equipment to gather food or navigate reefs. Their abilities come from daily interaction with the marine environment, where fishing and diving are essential. Regular practice strengthens lung capacity, oxygen use, and endurance. While lighter hair and occasionally lighter eyes may slightly improve underwater visibility, most diving skill comes from physical adaptation and cultural training. Some freediving populations, like the Bajau, show spleen enlargement to store oxygen, though this has not been measured in Melanesians. From an evolutionary perspective, as Darwin described, traits that improve survival increase in frequency. On isolated islands, the ability to swim, dive, and gather food efficiently provides an advantage. Over generations, individuals excelling at these skills thrive, illustrating natural selection in action. Compared to most people, Melanesians with this trait combine a distinctive appearance with deep-water skills and physical adaptations shaped by environment and culture, showing how genetics and lifestyle interact to produce both striking appearance and practical abilities. #Genetics #Science #ScienceNews #News #USNews #America #USA

Abraham Lincoln

How I Became a Lawyer Without a Teacher or School I was born in 1809 in a log cabin in Kentucky and had less than a year of formal schooling. Books were rare, so I walked miles to borrow them and read by firelight whenever I could. I told myself, “I will prepare and some day my chance will come,” because learning was the only way forward. I read everything I could find, learning arithmetic, grammar, and history before I ever thought of law, and I tried to understand what I read as deeply as possible. When my mother died, my stepmother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, joined our family. She encouraged my reading, lent me books, and showed patience when others expected me to work the fields. She taught me that education was more than books; it was forming the mind and character. Her guidance gave me the confidence to pursue knowledge on my own and made me value persistence and curiosity. I taught myself law by studying Blackstone’s Commentaries and other legal manuals. I spent hours in courthouses in Springfield and New Salem, watching lawyers, listening to arguments, and learning from what I observed. I practiced drafting contracts and resolving disputes on my own. “I studied with an unassisted mind, with no teacher, in my leisure time,” I said later. By 1836, my study and observation prepared me to pass the bar and begin practicing law. Others saw something in me. Walt Whitman described me as “Gentle, plain, just and resolute,” while William Gladstone called me a man of “moral elevation most rare in a statesman.” Those words reflect how persistence, curiosity, and guidance from someone who believes in you can shape a life. “The things I learned were not in the schools. I had to find them myself and keep at it,” I said. From log cabin to law office, self-education, careful observation, and determination made my life possible. #History #USHistory #America #USA #Lincoln #Motivation #KnowledgeIsPower

1776 Patriot

The 1924 Rondout Train Robbery: Largest Train Heist in American History The 1924 Rondout train robbery is the largest and most lucrative train heist in United States history. On June 12, 1924, a mail train operated by the Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific Railroad, called the Fast Mail, was stopped near Rondout Illinois, 30 miles north of Chicago. Six criminals carried out the robbery using inside knowledge from corrupt United States Postal Inspector William J Fahy, later convicted. Fahy knew train schedules, mail car layouts, and security procedures, enabling the robbery. The gang was led by brothers Willis, Jess, and Doc Newton of the Newton Gang. Willis and Doc boarded the northbound train leaving Chicago, forcing the engineer and fireman at gunpoint to stop near Rondout where four accomplices waited in automobiles. The robbers confronted crew and mail clerks using weapons and 12 tear gas smoke bombs to force compliance. They removed 45 mail sacks containing $2,137,000 in cash, money orders, securities, and valuables, equivalent to roughly $38,000,000 today. Each sack contained thousands of items including registered letters, small gold shipments, business payrolls, and government bonds. The gang had maps of train routes and schedules, allowing them to know exactly where to stop the train for the ambush. A critical error occurred when the engineer stopped 400 feet past the planned ambush point, causing confusion. During the chaos, Doc Newton was shot 5 times by a fellow conspirator and critically wounded. Doc fled to a Chicago residence, drawing suspicion. Authorities quickly identified three gang members and Fahy, revealing the inside job. Fahy received a 25-year federal prison sentence, the only Postal Inspector convicted of mail theft. Authorities recovered most stolen funds, but some items, including rare securities and cash, were never found. A simple bronze marker now marks the exact spot of America’s greatest train heist. #USHistory #History #USA

You've reached the end!
Tag: Usa - Page 8 | LocalAll