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May 14, 2026

Australia’s Rabbit Disaster Started With Just 24 Animals

In 1859, English settler Thomas Austin (a wealthy pastoralist) released about 24 European rabbits (a mix of wild and domestic Oryctolagus cuniculus) on his Barwon Park estate near Winchelsea, Victoria, for sport hunting. The rabbits arrived on Christmas Day from his family in Somerset, England.

Rabbits had arrived earlier with the First Fleet in 1788 and in small numbers afterward, but these earlier populations did not explode. Genetic studies (2022) confirm that nearly all of Australia’s feral rabbits today descend from Austin’s single introduction, the wild English rabbits had advantageous genetics for rapid spread in the Australian environment.

A herd of rabbits gathers around a watering hole on South Australia’s Wardang Island. Within 50 years of arriving on an English settler’s estate near Melbourne, invasive European rabbits had overrun most of the continent.

Rabbits have high reproductive rates (females can produce multiple litters per year with 4–12 young each). With few natural predators, abundant food (grasses and crops), and suitable burrowing soil, their numbers exploded. By the mid-1860s, thousands were being shot on Austin’s property alone. They spread at up to 100 km per year. By the 1880s, they reached New South Wales and Queensland. By around 1910, they occupied most of southern and central Australia.

The rabbits caused severe ecological and economic damage. They devoured crops, pastures, and seedlings, leading to farm failures, soil erosion, and abandoned properties. They competed with sheep and cattle for food. Overgrazing stripped vegetation, causing erosion, loss of native plants, and habitat degradation. This harmed native wildlife (e.g., by reducing food and shelter for species like bilbies and bandicoots). They altered landscapes on a continental scale and contributed to the decline of native biodiversity.

Plagues were reported in various regions from the 1870s onward, with populations reaching hundreds of millions (estimates later peaked around 600 million before controls). Desperate colonial governments and farmers tried multiple strategies to halt the plague, though most had minimal impact.

By 1866, hunters had slaughtered 50,000 rabbits on Austin’s estate alone, yet the local breeding population outpaced the harvesting. Farmers deployed strychnine across properties to poison food and water sources, accidentally killing native wildlife. Settlers introduced European red foxes and feral cats to hunt the rabbits, but these predators chose to hunt easier native marsupials instead, worsening the biodiversity crisis. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, states built massive barriers, including the famous 1,700km rabbit-proof fence in Western Australia, but rabbits breached them before completion.

Rabbit proof fence in Australia, ca. 1920.

Major success came later with biological controls: the myxomatosis virus in the 1950s (which initially killed ~99% of rabbits) and later the calicivirus (RHDV).

The rabbit invasion remains a classic cautionary tale about invasive species. Australia still manages feral rabbits (numbers are much lower than peak but still problematic), and the event highlights how a small introduction in a naive ecosystem can have catastrophic, long-lasting effects. Thomas Austin is often blamed, though he was just one of many who introduced animals for “acclimatisation.”

Lorry load of rabbits, Braidwood, NSW, early 20th century.

Bert Mann with a load of rabbit skins, Walcha, NSW, ca. 1905.

1940s Found Photos of Young Women at a Beach

Found by Steven Martin, these charming photos offer a delightful and intimate glimpse into the carefree spirit of the 1940s. Captured during a sunny day at the beach, they feature young women in classic wartime and immediate postwar fashion: high-waisted swimsuits, playful poses, victory rolls hairstyles, and radiant smiles.

Full of youthful energy, innocence, and joy, these candid images perfectly embody the spirit of summer escapes during one of the most turbulent decades of the 20th century. More than just snapshots, they serve as warm, personal time capsules that preserve a fleeting moment of freedom, friendship, and simple happiness by the sea.






30 Fascinating Photos of The Beach Boys in the 1960s

The Beach Boys were one of the most iconic and innovative American bands of the 1960s, evolving from surf-rock pioneers to sophisticated studio innovators. They defined the “California Sound” with themes of beaches, cars, and young romance, while pushing pop music boundaries through intricate vocal harmonies and production techniques.

Formed in 1961 in Hawthorne, California, the core lineup included brothers Brian Wilson (bass, keyboards, main songwriter/producer), Carl Wilson (guitar), Dennis Wilson (drums), their cousin Mike Love (lead vocals), and friend Al Jardine (guitar/vocals). David Marks briefly replaced Jardine in 1962–63.

Their debut single “Surfin’” (1961) and album Surfin’ Safari (1962) launched them with upbeat, energetic tracks celebrating surf culture. Hits like “Surfin’ U.S.A” (1963, a Chuck Berry adaptation) exploded nationally, sparking a surf music craze. Other early successes included “Surfer Girl,” “Little Deuce Coupe,” and car-themed songs.

They released multiple albums quickly (often 2–3 per year), blending doo-wop harmonies, rock ‘n’ roll, and youthful vigor. Their tight live shows kept them touring heavily. This era made them America’s top response to the British Invasion, sustaining commercial success with 16 consecutive U.S. Top 40 hits in their early streak.

In late 1964/early 1965, Brian Wilson stopped touring due to stress and anxiety (replaced live by Bruce Johnston, who later joined officially). This allowed him to focus on songwriting and production.

1966 was their artistic pinnacle. Brian, inspired by Phil Spector’s “Wall of Sound,” The Beatles’ Rubber Soul, and classical/jazz elements, created Pet Sounds, a concept-like album of introspective, orchestral pop with unconventional instruments (e.g., theremin, bicycle bells, flutes). Tracks like “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” “God Only Knows,” and “Caroline, No” showcased sophisticated harmonies and production. It was expensive and innovative for its time. Paul McCartney has cited it as a major influence on Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Later in 1966, the single “Good Vibrations” (a “pocket symphony” with modular recording) became a massive hit and further cemented their experimental reputation.

Smiley Smile (1967) was a stripped-down, psychedelic-leaning release after the ambitious Smile project (Brian’s “teenage symphony to God”) was shelved due to stress, drug use, and band tensions. Albums like Wild Honey (1967), Friends (1968), and 20/20 (1969) mixed R&B, psychedelia, and simpler sounds. They explored more personal and spiritual themes while maintaining strong (if evolving) commercial presence.

The band remained a top live act, though Brian's reduced involvement and the era’s shifting tastes (rise of harder rock/psychedelia) presented challenges. They influenced genres like power pop, progressive rock, and lo-fi.






May 13, 2026

Photos of the Women’s Voluntary Service Collecting Kitchen Waste for Pig Food in 1943

During World War II in Britain, the Women’s Voluntary Service (WVS, now Royal Voluntary Service) played a key role in collecting kitchen waste (often called “swill”) for use as pig food as part of the national salvage and recycling efforts on the Home Front.

This was a practical response to wartime shortages. German U-boat attacks disrupted imports, so Britain needed to maximize domestic food production, including meat from pigs. Kitchen scraps, vegetable peelings, leftovers, etc..., were collected, processed (often boiled and sterilized into “pig swill” at special plants), and fed to pigs, helping reduce waste and support agriculture.

Households were encouraged to save scraps in “pig bins” (often communal street bins or individual ones). The WVS organized collections, awareness drives, door-to-door canvassing, and delivery to farmers or processing centers. Over 42,000 WVS members were involved in various salvage activities, including kitchen waste.

These photos were part of propaganda to encourage public participation in salvage schemes:






Venice in 1954: Timeless Elegance in Vintage Photos

In the mid-1950s, Venice remained one of the most enchanting and atmospheric cities in the world. Still largely untouched by modern development, the city moved at a slower, more graceful pace, with gondolas gliding silently through misty canals and the gentle sound of water lapping against ancient stone walls.

This was a golden period when Venice attracted a sophisticated crowd of artists, writers, filmmakers, and wealthy travelers. The elegance of the past lingered strongly: from the grand hotels along the Grand Canal to the fashionable crowds in Piazza San Marco. It was an era of refined beauty, where the fading grandeur of the city’s palaces mixed with a romantic, almost melancholic charm that photographers and cineastes found irresistible.

Enjoy this nostalgic collection of photos that beautifully preserve the soul and timeless allure of Venice as it was in 1954.

A view of Ponte dell'Accademia and Chiesa di San Vidal, Venice, 1954

Boats on the canal, Venice, 1954

Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Venice, 1954

Floridabar and Terrazza Sommariva, Venice, 1954

Grand Canal, Venice, 1954

The Famous Encounter Between a Filipino Fisherman and the Top-Secret U.S. Navy Nuclear Submarine USS Triton in 1960

On April 1, 1960, a 19-year-old Filipino fisherman Rufino Baring reportedly encountered the USS Triton (SSRN-586), the U.S. Navy’s massive nuclear-powered submarine, during its top-secret Operation Sandblast, the first submerged circumnavigation of the world. The fisherman reportedly mistook the periscope as the eye of a sea monster, leading him to believe he was seeing something monstrous.

Rubino Baring sighted by USS Triton in the Bohol Strait on April 1, 1960.

The Triton, commanded by Captain Edward L. Beach, was on a landmark 60,000+ mile underwater voyage following (roughly) the route of Ferdinand Magellan. It stayed submerged for nearly the entire 83-day journey to showcase nuclear submarine capabilities during the Cold War.

While transiting Magellan Bay, the sub briefly raised its periscope. The crew spotted Baring paddling nearby, only about 50 yards away. Captain Beach described the surreal scene in the ship’s log: an “impassive Asian” in a simple canoe staring at the periscope, while on the other end was a state-of-the-art $100 million submarine crew looking back. He noted the vast “abyss” of centuries of technological difference.

The photo was taken by a crew member (likely involving National Geographic photographer Joseph Baylor Roberts, who was aboard).

USS Triton (SSRN-586) during sea trials (September 27, 1959).

Baring was terrified. He later told National Geographic (which published the photo and tracked him down) that he thought the periscope was the “gleaming mysterious eye” of a sea monster. He paddled away as fast as he could.

He became the only civilian/unauthorized person known to have visually spotted the Triton during its entire secret mission.

The image perfectly symbolizes the clash between ancient, traditional ways of life and modern military technology. It’s a fascinating, almost whimsical footnote in one of the most impressive feats of underwater navigation in history.

Jackie Magazine Covers: Iconic 1970s Teen Style

Jackie was one of the most iconic and influential British teen magazines of the 20th century. Launched on January 11, 1964 by D.C. Thomson & Co., it quickly became the best-selling girls’ magazine in Britain, particularly during the 1970s.

Targeted at teenage girls, Jackie offered a mix of fashion and beauty tips, pop star posters, photo love stories, problem pages (famously answered by Cathy and Claire), and light-hearted articles on boys, friendship, and growing up. At its peak, it sold over 600,000 copies per week, shaping the dreams, tastes, and insecurities of generations of British girls.

Though it maintained a relatively innocent and wholesome tone compared to later magazines, Jackie remained a cultural touchstone for British teenage life until its final issue in July 1993. These vibrant and nostalgic magazine covers capture the spirit, fashion, and youthful dreams of the 1970s, offering a colorful glimpse into the world of British teenage culture at the height of Jackie’s popularity.

Jackie magazine cover, January 17, 1970

Jackie magazine cover, April 4, 1970

Jackie magazine cover, August 1, 1970

Jackie magazine cover, February 21, 1970

Jackie magazine cover, March 14, 1970




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