Search Results | europeans
Your search for "europeans" returned 1,861 results
Surgeon Robert Liston Was the 'Fastest Knife in the West End'
Surgeon Robert Liston was well-known for his operating speed and survival rates. Learn more about this quick-drawing doctor at HowStuffWorks Now.
Historically, Houseplants Were For the Rich
home.howstuffworks.com/houseplants-not-rich-chinese-money-tree-symbolizes-wealth.htm
In Victorian times, only a few plants could stand up to the fumes from coal fires and gas lamps. Now, we have a wide variety of plants to choose from.
Marked at Birth: Your Birth Month, Allergies and DNA Are Linked
Although scientists knew that birth season affected people's allergy risk, they didn't know why this happened. A study gets us one step closer.
Ridiculous History: Ancient India Beat Machiavelli to the Punch by 1,800 Years
history.howstuffworks.com/historical-figures/arthashastra-ancient-india-machiavelli-prince.htm
What is the Arthashastra? Learn more about the Arthashastra and Niccolo Machiavelli's "The Prince" in this HowStuffWorks Now article.
We Know Far Less About Sharks Than You Might Think
animals.howstuffworks.com/fish/sharks/unanswered-science-questions-shark-research.htm
What are the big questions in shark research? Learn more about what we don't know about sharks in this HowStuffWorks Now article.
5 Things You Didn't Know About Blue Jeans
lifestyle.howstuffworks.com/style/fashion/trends-looks/5-things-didn-t-know-about-blue-jeans.htm
HowStuffWorks looks at the history of blue jeans and tells you where those rivets came from.
6 Cool Innovations That Could Change Air Travel Forever
Choosing your seatmates through social media? Facial recognition technology to match you and your luggage? The airline industry has the ideas... but will it adopt them?
Getting to Know the Didge, the 'World's Healthiest Instrument'
entertainment.howstuffworks.com/didgeridoo.htm
The didgeridoo, or didge, is an ancient wind instrument created by the aboriginal people of Australia, but still widely played today.
Embracing Ennui: How Boredom Can Be Good for You
health.howstuffworks.com/mental-health/human-nature/ennui
Everyone experiences boredom at some point and maybe even ennui, a chronic type of boredom. But surprisingly, ennui does have some benefits.
You Need It Like a Hole in the Head: The Ancient Medical Art of Trepanation
health.howstuffworks.com/medicine/surgeries-procedures/trepanation.htm
Drilling a hole in somebody's skull was all the rage 4,000 to 12,000 years ago. In fact, 5 to 10 percent of skulls from this period have a hole in them, made while the person was still alive. The question is, why?