From today's featured article
Mount Berlin is a glacier-covered volcano in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. It is a roughly 20-kilometre-wide (12 mi) mountain with parasitic vents. It consists of two coalesced volcanoes: Berlin proper with the 2-kilometre-wide (1.2 mi) Berlin Crater, and Merrem Peak 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) away with a 2.5-by-1-kilometre-wide (1.6 mi × 0.6 mi) crater. Mount Berlin has a volume of 200 cubic kilometres (50 cu mi) and rises 3,478 metres (11,411 ft) above sea level from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. It is part of the Marie Byrd Land Volcanic Province. Trachyte is the dominant volcanic rock, occurring as solidified lava flows and pyroclastic rocks. The volcano was active from the Pliocene into the Holocene. Tephra layers from all over Antarctica have been linked to Mount Berlin, the major regional source of such tephras. The tephra was formed by explosive eruptions that generated high eruption columns. Currently, fumarolic activity occurs that forms ice towers from frozen steam. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that teenage Inuk interpreter Qalaherriaq (pictured) drew an accurate map of northwest Greenland while using a pencil for the first time?
- ... that from March to May 1962, 60,000 Chinese citizens migrated to the Soviet Union through two ports of entry?
- ... that aviator Paul Pavelka was killed after being thrown and trampled by a horse?
- ... that Laguna Honda Hospital is a non-profit long-term care facility that has been described as America's "last big almshouse"?
- ... that Yunè Pinku derived the first half of her stage name from a childhood nickname and the second half from the children's program Pingu?
- ... that a college designed for and led by Native Americans was active in Chicago from 1974 to 2005?
- ... that John Boswell believed that the executed King Charles I of England was a martyr?
- ... that zanana can refer to a nagging wife in Egypt, or to Israeli drones flying overhead in Gaza?
In the news
- Nayib Bukele (pictured) is re-elected President of El Salvador.
- Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor is sworn in as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia.
- Former prime minister of Pakistan Imran Khan is sentenced to ten years in prison for leaking state secrets, fourteen years for corruption, and seven years for illegal marriage.
- Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger announce their withdrawal from the Economic Community of West African States.
On this day
February 6: Sámi National Day (1917); Waitangi Day in New Zealand (1840)
- 1788 – Massachusetts became the sixth state to ratify the constitution of the United States.
- 1819 – British official Stamford Raffles signed a treaty with Sultan Hussein Shah of Johor, establishing Singapore as a trading post for the East India Company.
- 1919 – More than 65,000 workers in Seattle began a five-day general strike to gain higher wages after two years of U.S. World War I wage controls.
- 1958 – The aircraft carrying the Manchester United football team crashed while attempting to take off from Munich-Riem Airport in West Germany, killing 8 players and 23 people in total (news reel featured).
- Joseph Priestley (d. 1804)
- Barbara W. Tuchman (d. 1989)
- Jack Kirby (d. 1994)
- Gary Moore (d. 2011)
Today's featured picture
Magna Lykseth-Skogman (6 February 1874 – 13 November 1949) was a Norwegian-born Swedish operatic soprano. After making her debut at the Royal Swedish Opera (Kungliga Operan) in 1901 as Santuzza in Cavalleria rusticana, she was engaged there until 1918 and became the company's prima donna. Lykseth performed leading roles in a wide range of operas but is remembered in particular for her Wagnerian interpretations, creating Brünnhilde in the Swedish premieres of Siegfried and Götterdämmerung, as well as Isolde in Tristan und Isolde in 1909. Considered to be one of the most outstanding Swedish opera singers of her generation, she was awarded the Litteris et Artibus, a Swedish royal medal for the arts, in 1907 and became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music in 1912. This 1909 photograph shows Lykseth in costume as Isolde with the Kungliga Operan. Photograph credit: Atelier Jaeger; restored by Adam Cuerden
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