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This Happened

This Happened - April 23: ​History's First Iconic War Photo

Roger Fenton's photograph "the Valley of the Shadow of Death," is considered the first-ever iconic war image, and was taken on this day in 1885.

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What is the Valley of the Shadow of Death?

The area known as the "Valley of the Shadow of Death" is a narrow valley in Crimea, where one of the bloodiest battles of the Crimean War took place on October 25, 1854. The photograph was taken in 1855, after the battle had taken place. It is not a photograph of the actual battle, but rather a photograph of the aftermath.

What is the significance of the Valley of the Shadow of Death photograph?

The image is significant because it is one of the first images in the early years of photography to depict the aftermath of a battle. It shows a desolate landscape littered with cannonballs, and it captures the horror and devastation of war. The photograph also raises questions about the role of photography in shaping public opinion about war.

What happened to the Valley of the Shadow of Death?

The Valley of the Shadow of Death is still in the Crimea, and it is now a popular tourist destination. The area has been cleaned up and is no longer littered with cannonballs, but there are still signs of the battle, including trenches and fortifications.

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Green

Gimme Shelter! Using Tech To Rethink How We Protect Endangered Species

Human-made shelters don’t always keep creatures out of harm’s way. Can technology help design a better protect birds and possums?

Photograph of two swallows peeking outside of a blue wooden bird nest

Swallows peak outside of a bird nest

Mariko Margetson/Unsplash
Marta Zaraska

In 2016, Ox Lennon was trying to peek in the crevices inside a pile of rocks. They considered everything from injecting builders’ foam into the tiny spaces to create a mold to dumping a heap of stones into a CT scanner. Still, they couldn’t get the data they were after: how to stack rocks so that a mouse wouldn’t squeeze through, but a small lizard could hide safely inside.

Lennon, then a Ph.D. student at Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, aimed to protect skinks, snake-like lizards on which non-native mice prey. When road construction near Wellington displaced a local population of the reptiles, they were moved to a different site. But the new location lacked the rock piles that skinks use as shelter.

So, Lennon and their colleagues set out to create a mice-proof pile of rocks. It proved harder than they thought.

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