12-29-2024, 03:56 AM
Wgrj Path, The xx, and More
Kids these days, swiping and tapping away at iPads, have absolutely no idea how to fix a mechanical spindle. But until around the Great Depression, children were free to stanley mug work in factories alongside adults. It nothing to get nostalgic about. In the early 20th century, with a lack of child labor laws and limited safety requirements, businesses were free to use children for cheap work in dangerous conditions. About 100 years later, kids still have a relationship with machines. But as these 20 images show, it a stark contrast compared with the equipment their grandparents grew up using. Like many other children working in this mill in 1908, this child just turned up to help her sister. Photo: Lewis Hine/National stanley cups Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives After a day spent riding roller coasters at Coney Island, this girl chats on stanley cup her cell phone while cracking a big hunk of bubble gum. Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images These young boys and girls worked day in and day out at Cornell Mill in Fall River, Massachusetts, in the winter of 1912. Photo: Lewis Hine/National Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives About 100 years later, in Philadelphia School of the Future, Microsoft provided laptops to each freshman in a class of 170. Photo: Tim Shaffer/Microsoft via Getty Images By 1911, Stanislaus Beauvais had already worked in this Massachusetts factory for two years. Photo: Lewis Hine/National Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives At CES in Las V Nriy Porn Star Internet Memes: Naked Harlem Shake (NSFW)
The plague that wiped out over a third of Europe population in the 14th century came from a bacteria known as Yersinia pestis. Now we ;ve sequenced its genome 8230;and it weirdly, almost worryingly identical to its modern descendants. Bubonic plague is still around, but these days it exceedingly rare and quite treatable. It hard to believe that the Y. pestis strains we see today are even related to those that ravaged Europe in the 1300s indeed, some stanley vaso researchers have voiced doubts that Y. pestis even is the Black Death pathogen at all because its behavior and virulence are so different. Now, thanks to a mass grave dug in London at the height of the plague, we kno stanley en mexico w for sure that it really was Y. pestis that was responsible. Researchers at the University of T眉bingen were able to recover stanley cup pieces of the bacterium DNA from the teeth of the victims found in the grave. From this, the researchers have pieced together a genome for the Black Death, making it the first pathogen more than a century old to be sequenced. So then, we know Y. pestis really was the Black Death. The only problem is that this is the sort of answer that just raises more questions. Researcher Johannes Krause explains that, as far as DNA is concerned, there practically nothing to differentiate the Black Death from modern Y. pestis strains. The results were obviously massively different, but it doesn ;t appear that some deadly mutation happened to
Kids these days, swiping and tapping away at iPads, have absolutely no idea how to fix a mechanical spindle. But until around the Great Depression, children were free to stanley mug work in factories alongside adults. It nothing to get nostalgic about. In the early 20th century, with a lack of child labor laws and limited safety requirements, businesses were free to use children for cheap work in dangerous conditions. About 100 years later, kids still have a relationship with machines. But as these 20 images show, it a stark contrast compared with the equipment their grandparents grew up using. Like many other children working in this mill in 1908, this child just turned up to help her sister. Photo: Lewis Hine/National stanley cups Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives After a day spent riding roller coasters at Coney Island, this girl chats on stanley cup her cell phone while cracking a big hunk of bubble gum. Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images These young boys and girls worked day in and day out at Cornell Mill in Fall River, Massachusetts, in the winter of 1912. Photo: Lewis Hine/National Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives About 100 years later, in Philadelphia School of the Future, Microsoft provided laptops to each freshman in a class of 170. Photo: Tim Shaffer/Microsoft via Getty Images By 1911, Stanislaus Beauvais had already worked in this Massachusetts factory for two years. Photo: Lewis Hine/National Child Labor Committee/U.S. National Archives At CES in Las V Nriy Porn Star Internet Memes: Naked Harlem Shake (NSFW)
The plague that wiped out over a third of Europe population in the 14th century came from a bacteria known as Yersinia pestis. Now we ;ve sequenced its genome 8230;and it weirdly, almost worryingly identical to its modern descendants. Bubonic plague is still around, but these days it exceedingly rare and quite treatable. It hard to believe that the Y. pestis strains we see today are even related to those that ravaged Europe in the 1300s indeed, some stanley vaso researchers have voiced doubts that Y. pestis even is the Black Death pathogen at all because its behavior and virulence are so different. Now, thanks to a mass grave dug in London at the height of the plague, we kno stanley en mexico w for sure that it really was Y. pestis that was responsible. Researchers at the University of T眉bingen were able to recover stanley cup pieces of the bacterium DNA from the teeth of the victims found in the grave. From this, the researchers have pieced together a genome for the Black Death, making it the first pathogen more than a century old to be sequenced. So then, we know Y. pestis really was the Black Death. The only problem is that this is the sort of answer that just raises more questions. Researcher Johannes Krause explains that, as far as DNA is concerned, there practically nothing to differentiate the Black Death from modern Y. pestis strains. The results were obviously massively different, but it doesn ;t appear that some deadly mutation happened to