The complete human nervous system, extracted by two medical students in 1925. The extraction process took over 1,500 hours. There are only four such specimens in the world.
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The removal of trash from an apartment where two brothers accumulated around 130 tons of junk. One of the brothers tried to reach his paralyzed brother but died under the debris.
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A highway in Kobe, Japan, after the devastating Hanshin earthquake on January 17, 1995.
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Nokia on the cover of Forbes: "Who Can Catch the King of Phones?" 2007.
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An Inca skull with a gold plate implant over 500 years old, found in Peru.
It is evident that the surgery was successful, as the plate partially fused with the skull, indicating the patient survived and lived for several years after the operation.
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A column of retreating Iraqis bombed by American forces.
Kuwait, 1991.
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Due to the high sulfur vapor content in the air on the Izu Islands, people had to wear gas masks to survive.
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The first American underground nuclear test. Nevada, USA, September 19, 1957.
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At first glance, this photograph seems quite ordinary. But just seconds after the photo was taken, a bomb exploded in the car on the right, killing nearly everyone around, including the photographer. The attack claimed 29 lives.
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According to various estimates, between 70,000 and 200,000 people were shot at Babi Yar from 1941 to 1943.
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One of the ancient Talmud books with illustrations that seem to be from another world...
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At the end of 2001, a tomb of giant proportions was discovered near the Sahara.
Many valuable resources were excavated, but the most frightening discovery was yet to come. In the enormous sarcophagi, mummies of non-human size were found. Their height exceeded 3 meters, and their weight was over 120 kilograms. The exact age could not be determined, but researchers speculate that the giant is over 3,000 years old.
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However, he dined daily in its restaurant, explaining that it was the only place in Paris where the tower could not be seen.
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American aviator Jacqueline Cochran with a Northrop Gamma airplane. Later, in 1953, she became the first woman pilot to break the sound barrier, and in 1964, the first woman pilot to exceed twice the speed of sound.
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The first book printed on a printing press was the Bible. This event, which took place in 1455, marked a revolution in the history of printing.
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A nanny shelters children in a cupboard during a German air raid, London, 1942.
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The Orient Express.
A luxury passenger train operated by the private company Orient-Express Hotels, running between Paris and Constantinople from 1883 to 1977.
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Women shaved bald as punishment for alleged collaboration with German occupiers, 1944.
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A soldier who survived the horrors of war. Vietnam, 1966. After jumping from the plane, he witnessed the aircraft fly beneath his parachute and crash into a mountain.
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Marie Skłodowska-Curie – the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize, the first person to receive a Nobel Prize twice, and the only person to be awarded Nobel Prizes in two different sciences.
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Max Factor taking measurements of actress Marjorie Reynolds using his invented "beauty micrometer," 1934.
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