The Pan-American Highway is a road that goes from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in the Arctic Circle, to Ushuaia, Argentina, known as the most southern city in the world. It was going to be a railroad, but then cars were invented and that made construction easier. The United States has the most miles of the highway, but we had to cheat a bit to actually claim that. Yet a hundred years after the project was initiated, the highway is still not complete. The real problem is the Darién Gap, in southern Panama and western Colombia. So the highway gap is right where the two American continents meet.
Jay Foreman and Mark Cooper-Jones are the Map Men (previously at Neatorama). They make jokes aplenty while explaining how the Pan-American highway was conceived and what stopped its completion. There's a sponsor message from 4:43 to 6:10, and everything after 11:06 is promotional. -via Damn Interesting

One of the funnier quirks of Star Trek is that all alien sentient life forms look just like humans, just with funny bumps on their faces or pointy ears. Better special effects gave us different aliens, but most still ended up with a head, eyes, mouths, and limbs. The new movie Project Hail Mary explores a different kind of alien life- things that don't resemble anything we've ever encountered before. And that's what we should really be looking for.
What if life on other planets isn't dependent on liquid water? What of the building blocks of life elsewhere were based on, say, silicon instead of carbon? The search for life elsewhere has been based on detecting signals that indicate planets are like earth, but that might not be necessary. The search for signals of an advanced technology may be looking for the wrong patterns, or may be a completely useless framework. Alien life may be different in more ways than we can even imagine, and a lot of that depends on how you define "life." The Conversation poses five ways we may have been thinking about alien life all wrong, with links to further information on each idea.
What do you do with a blind husky? In Dani's case, she was sent for euthanasia when she was just a puppy, possibly by a breeder who couldn't sell her. Dani was born without eyes. She was rescued from her fate by an organization that takes in special needs dogs, and then was adopted. Her new family had plenty of pets, but still had the time and patience that Dani needed.
Huskies are bred for the outdoors, and even a blind dog wants to run and play. Dani gets that chance with a long lead that keeps her in sight but still lets her go full speed ahead in a safe area. She also loves to play ball, and is used to losing it every now and then. She has no trouble getting around in familiar places, and not much trouble in unfamiliar places. That's a good dog. See more of Dani and her occasionally pink tail at Instagram.

The Kunlun Mountains form the northern boundary of Tibet. If you stand on summit of them and look northwest, you should be able to see Pik Dankova, the tallest mountain in the Tian Shan range of Kyrgyzstan 329 miles away--provided that the weather is clear.
This is the farthest line of sight on the planet Earth.
Google Maps Mania directs our attention to All the Views, a fascinating interactive tool that allows you to calculate the farthest line of sight from any location on Earth.

It's an interactive tool that is fun to explore. I learned that the farthest line of sight in Texas is Guadalupe Peak which has a line of sight of 140 miles to the southeast.
-via Nag on the Lake

In December of 2007, a newspaper photographer in Lewiston, Idaho, saw a sign painter adding a Christmas message to a storefront window. It was a nice seasonal scene, so he took a picture for the Lewiston Tribune. Other journalists that day reported on a wallet theft that was caught on a security camera. A still image showing the perpetrator ended up on front page, just below the sign painter. The two men looked alike, and they were wearing the same colorful jacket. And the sign painter's name was in the upper caption.
Who noticed the similarities in the two front page pictures? Pretty much everyone. It didn't actually fly over the heads of the newspaper copy editors, either, but it went to print before they could update the story. See the paper and read the story of the guy who made the front page twice at Now I Know. -via kottke, where you'll see a larger, readable image.
(Unrelated image credit: Michael Slaten)
When plastics were developed, they were considered life-changing. A material that is cheap, strong, lightweight, furable, and can be shaped in any way? Sure, let's go for that! But as terrifyingly long lasting as plastic is, it does degrade. That's why bottled water has an expiration date- because the plastic in the bottle wears out. As it degrades, plastic sheds microscopic pieces that get into our environment, our food, and our bodies. And out bodies haven't yet developed an efficient way to get rid of it.
So what does accumulating plastic in our bodies do to us? We don't know much about it yet, but we're seeing evidence that it can lead to obesity and infertility, two of the major health trends in the modern world. We can't do a lot about the microplastics we already have in our bodies, but there are a few things we can do the lessen the amount we ingest. -via Geeks Are Sexy

Dr. William P. Key was a formerly-enslaved self-taught veterinarian in Tennessee who made his living by selling his patent medicine Keystone Liniment. He was particularly talented with horses and always advocated for a gentle touch and humane treatment of animals. In 1889, one of his mares gave birth to a foal that was a “miserable looking specimen.” Key took the foal into his home and named him Jim Key. As Jim grew into a magnificent adult, Key taught him a vast repertoire of tricks.
"Beautiful Jim Key" was exhibited across the country for years, where he wrote his name, properly exchanged money, and spelled out audience member's names by selecting letters from a rack. He could also solve math equations by picking numbers. Jim was one of the biggest draws at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis. All that time, Dr. Key used Jim to spread the message of kindness to animals and how training was most effective when using gentleness and patience. Read about the show biz career of Beautiful Jim Key. -via Strange Company
CC is a wobbly cat, meaning she has cerebellar hypoplasia. But you don't even notice that when you see her- what you notice is that she's a heckin' chonker. CC weighed 23 pounds when she came into the care of The Big House Cats in Ontario, a rescue shelter for very overweight cats. CC was so fat she couldn't climb into her litter box, and she could barely take a few steps before she had to sit down.
Restricted food and lots of love got her started. Then they added exercise, and found that CC really wanted to play, but she was just too big to do it. As she lost weight, she became more playful. So far, she's lost six pounds! At around five minutes, you get to see before and after pictures that show how far she has come. Her goal is to lose five more pounds. See more of the Big House Cats at Instagram

The adage that counting sheep will help you sleep has given us a lot of jokes, but not a lot of sleep. The idea is very old. In the book Disciplina Clericalis, a collection of fables from the early 12th century, a king summons his storyteller, who is sleepy and doesn't want to tell stories. He tells a tale of a shepherd with 2,000 sheep, and to get them home they must cross a river. The only available boat will only hold two sheep, so they must make 1,000 trips. The first two sheep were loaded into the boat when the storyteller fell asleep. The king woke him, but the storyteller insisted that each sheep must be taken across the river. I'm not sure where the story goes after that; the only copy of the book I could find was a 1519 translation that didn't have that particular story.
The gist of it is that this story hints that falling asleep due to counting sheep was already an established concept understood by many before the story was written. Cervantes later made it funnier in Don Quixote. But does counting sheep in your mind actually help you fall asleep? The research is mixed, but you can see an overview of it at Purple Motes. -via Boing Boing
(Image credit: amenclinicsphotos ac via Wikimedia Commons)
There are people in this world who can afford to spend millions of dollars on a wedding. That's the perfect way to show the world how filthy rich you are, because there's going to be a lot of pictures testifying to how much you spent on a one-day party. And what good is money if you can't conspicuously consume it? Ryan George was obviously inspired to make this video by Jeff Bezos' and Lauren Sánchez' wedding last year, which reportedly cost $50 million. That wedding made all the papers for its outrageous flaunting of wealth, while Bezos' ex-wife MacKenzie Scott quietly spends her days writing large checks to charities.
But that's not the only over-the-top wedding designed to flaunt a family's wealth highlighted in this video. Some are more expensive than others, and some are just weird. He also takes a special look at ridiculous wedding cakes, which probably won't even make you hungry.

Marisa Whittamore, a stained glass artist, and Amanda Rosenblatt, a photographer, collaborated to create this extraordinary work of stained glass. This mind-bending work emerges from two dimensional space into the viewer. It's on display at the THAW Group exhibition in Jacksonville, Florida.
Janus Cycle faced the challenge of powering a modern device with humanity's earliest artificial energy source: fire.
The key components are a pair of Peltier modules. These devices convert heat into electricity. Janus Cycle placed these modules over an open flame in a cardboard box to concentrate the heat. He used thermal compound to conduct the energy and route the electricity to the Game Boy.
Obstacles included the fragility of the Peltier modules, which can endure a maximum heat of 250°F, while generating enough electricity (about 4 volts) to power up the Game Boy. The project was successful and Janus Cycle played Castlevania.
-via Hack A Day

A mere ditch separates the American and Canadian border between South Surrey, British Columbia and Blaine, Washington. On a daily basis, the Canadian cat Louis Vuitton flaunts US sovereignty by crossing that border whenever he wishes.
CBC News reports that there are security cameras and guards, but Louis Vuitton ignores them (and the Oregon Treaty of 1846) and strolls around the territory of the United States of America to receive tribute in the form of pats and belly rubs. He occasionally hunts squirrels, mice, and snakes to bring back across the border to Canada to offer to his humans.
-via Wholesome Side of X
Let's not overcomplicate this.
— Dr. Ann Olivarius (@AnnOlivarius) March 17, 2026
"Alpine divorce" is just plain ol' coercive control but in a Patagonia vest and hiking boots.
Putting your partner in a dangerous situation and leaving her there is a classic abusive tactic of punishment and control.
https://t.co/OEomZdZR9g
When I first heard the term "alpine divorce," I assumed it meant a case of murder or at least negligent manslaughter, like the recent case in Austria where a man abandoned his girlfriend on a mountain to die. But the term isn't limited to cases that end in death. There are plenty of stories on social media of dates that involved hiking or mountain climbing that ended the relationship.
An outdoors enthusiast wants to take a romantic partner or spouse up to a mountain to share their passion. But the lesser-experienced person, usually but not always a woman, cannot go as fast or as far. Do you slow down to accommodate your partner, or do you abandon her and push on ahead to conquer the challenge of the hike? How mountaineers answer that question reveals whether the priority is the relationship or their ego. Everyone is new to the experience when they start out, and not accommodating a newbie will not only ruin a relationship, it can put them in serious danger. Read about the phenomenon of alpine divorce at the Guardian. -via Metafilter
Georgia is proud to be called the Peach State, and that branding is everywhere, from water towers to the many streets named Peachtree in Atlanta. How did the state get that way? Peaches aren't a native fruit in America- they came from China by way of Europe. And when colonists found peach trees growing across the south, they didn't much like them. Instead, they started growing cotton, mostly for export, and made a ton of money. Even today, the cotton crop in Georgia is bigger than peaches, but "the land of cotton" as a slogan doesn't resonate the way it did 200 years ago.
How peaches became the symbol of Georgia is a neat story, but the most useful thing you'll learn is the difference between cling peaches and freestone peaches, which is good to know when you're at the grocery store. This video has a sponsor ad from 4:12 to 4:54.

