Brook Mitchell/Getty Images
Brook Mitchell/Getty Images
Carson's 1962 bestseller first warned the public about the devastating effects of chemical pesticides—and started a revolution.
These violent storms have had far-reaching consequences that altered the course of history in surprising ways.
The 2005 hurricane and subsequent levee failures led to death and destruction—and dealt a lasting blow to leadership and the Gulf region.
Railway tracks buckled, people slept in parks, hundreds died, while others tried to die as the heat and humidity became unbearable.
A camping trip in 1903 might be the most influential in history! John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt spent three nights in Yosemite. Muir would convince Roosevelt to protect Yosemite, paving the way for a National Park Service.
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