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19 votes
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Hidden pyramid structure discovered near Caral, Peru
9 votes -
Looking for a visualization of North American political boundaries over time
Lately I've been taking an interest in American westward expansion and trying to get a better understanding of how the lines were drawn on maps in the past. Can anyone recommend a good video or...
Lately I've been taking an interest in American westward expansion and trying to get a better understanding of how the lines were drawn on maps in the past. Can anyone recommend a good video or interactive visualization that I can scroll back and forward through time to see the changes in detail?
Things I'm particularly interested in tracking:
- Indigenous lands (specifically how the boundaries of traditional/ancestral lands evolved into modern-day reservations)
- European claims like those of Britain, France, and Spain
- What was considered US/Canada/Mexico territory vs. no man's land or frontier at different points in time, from the governance standpoint of each of those nations
- Large and rapid settling movements like the Mormons into Utah, Oklahoma land rush, California gold rush, etc.
- Other factors like homesteading programs (I don't know much about this) and the transcontinental railroad, confederacy borders, trail of tears, etc.
- Notable battles/massacres marking bloody land disputes
I mean I guess that's a lot, this is basically "tell me about all of American history." 😂
I feel like I have a pretty decent grasp of the general political timeline and important events, I'm just realizing lately that I don't have a cohesive mental model of how it all fits on a map and changed over the years. I did find the Wikipedia page on Territorial Evolution of the United States to be interesting but it's a bit overwhelming and not very digestible. It contains this animated gif, which is awesome but I can't scroll through it at my own pace, and it's USA only.
13 votes -
Resistance when the tyrant is in power: Florence’s Vasari Corridor
20 votes -
The leading AI models are now very good historians
19 votes -
How France uncovered the mystery of the forbidden photos of Nazi-occupied Paris
41 votes -
How long? Not long! - Martin Luther King
8 votes -
The lost towers of the Guelph-Ghibelline wars
17 votes -
Neolithic people on the Danish island Bornholm sacrificed hundreds of engraved sun stones – linked with a large volcanic eruption that made the sun disappear throughout Northern Europe
11 votes -
Uncharted territory: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau
3 votes -
Denmark has dropped the Three Crowns, a symbol of the Kalmar Union since the 14th century, from its own coat of arms
19 votes -
An archeological revolution transforms our image of human freedoms
9 votes -
Coinage and the tyranny of fantasy ‘gold’
19 votes -
How elite backlash to the populist reforms of the Gracchi brothers presaged the violent collapse of the Roman Republic
18 votes -
Roman with Scandinavian ancestry lived in Britain between AD100 and AD300, long before the Anglo-Saxons or Vikings arrived research shows
9 votes -
Building the worst World War II air force - terrible aircraft and how to sell them (feat. @AnimarchyHistory)
17 votes -
‘Really incredible’ sixth-century sword found in Kent in the United Kingdom
18 votes -
Disney's Animatronics: A living history
15 votes -
Dozens of sites linked to the Viking great army as it ravaged Anglo-Saxon England more than 1,000 years ago have been discovered
11 votes -
Why the Soviet Union was obsessed with corn
12 votes -
The gossip trap - How civilization came to be and how social media is ending it
23 votes -
Archeologists look at how and when humans first moved into the Pacific
6 votes -
The World History Encyclopedia and AI
I received an email this morning from the good folks at the WHE entitled: Perplexity AI Partnership to Improve History Education In it, their CEO Jan van der Crabben, writes: As the most-visited...
I received an email this morning from the good folks at the WHE entitled: Perplexity AI Partnership to Improve History Education
In it, their CEO Jan van der Crabben, writes:
As the most-visited history encyclopedia globally, World History Encyclopedia is pleased to announce a strategic partnership with Perplexity.ai.
…
As artificial intelligence (AI) tools based on large language models become increasingly accessible to the public, growing concerns have emerged regarding the quality of information provided by these tools. These AI systems are typically developed and trained using publicly available internet information, often without robust verification processes, and frequently generate inaccurate results.
There are also significant concerns about the business models of AI companies, which utilise content developed and meticulously checked by providers like World History Encyclopedia —a non-profit organisation— without obtaining proper consent, without providing compensation, and without offering appropriate attribution.
Perplexity.ai is an AI-powered search and answer engine that combines the capabilities of a search engine with artificial intelligence. Unlike most other AI systems, Perplexity clearly cites its sources, providing users with an easy way to verify the accuracy of its answers.
In alignment with our goal of being a trusted resource of accurate and objective historical information, we are excited about this partnership. It will allow us to develop tools based on the Perplexity API to make the content in World History Encyclopedia easier to find, browse, and access. We aim to develop educational AI tools for history learning in close collaboration with teachers to augment the World History Encyclopedia website for students.
The partnership will also enable World History Encyclopedia to use artificial intelligence to enhance our human review processes more efficiently. This includes improving tasks such as fact-checking and plagiarism detection.
Additionally, Perplexity is the first AI service that allows providers of information like World History Encyclopedia to be compensated fairly for the AI use of that information. We will receive a share of advertising revenue generated on the Perplexity platform whenever Perplexity cites World History Encyclopedia to answer a question.
I have worked with Jan and his staff many times over the last six years and I find them eminently trustworthy and dedicated to education.
What does everyone think of this kind of partnership moving forward? I understand Perplexity might have a slightly different approach that certain folks find promising.
And what kind of content do we think this might be able to generate? I look forward to your comments.
6 votes -
The history of slipping on banana peels | Pretty Good, episode 14
7 votes -
New industries come from crazy people
15 votes -
Archaeological dig at Notre-Dame unearths 2,000 years of history
12 votes -
A Man of Parts and Learning - The story behind a portrait of a black intellectual from the 1700s
5 votes -
Lost Silk Road cities were just discovered using new tech - high altitude communities challenge previous consensus about life in Central Asia
21 votes -
History is in the making - It's technology and ideas, not politics, that change our lives the most. History should reflect that.
10 votes -
The price America paid for its first big immigration crackdown
29 votes -
1891 New Orleans lynchings
7 votes -
Dowding: Man behind 'The Few' | Great British Battle Commanders
3 votes -
Is the current war in Palestine the first time the victim wound up being seen as the aggressor?
Something interesting about the latest escalations in the Israel-Palestine war since oct of last year is that Hamas was the one who launched the terrorist attack which lead to the current...
Something interesting about the latest escalations in the Israel-Palestine war since oct of last year is that Hamas was the one who launched the terrorist attack which lead to the current escalation.
Israel suffered a loss and was the victim on that day and the following days, but since their actions in Gaza and Rafah and other neighboring countries, the coverage of Israel very much shows the govt of Israel as the aggressor. It's felt like a complete role reversal to me.
Makes me wonder if this is the first time this has happened in such a short time? You can say that U.S. did the same thing after 9/11 but imo it's actions in the Middle east did not gain it a negative perception amongst world leaders nearly as fast.
19 votes -
Medieval Nubian fashion brought to life
13 votes -
A history of US cabinet appointments ...and why they matter
15 votes -
Artifacts and human remains taken by a Norwegian explorer and anthropologist in the 1940s are being returned to Chile's remote territory of Easter Island
8 votes -
St Andrews researchers discover ‘King Arthur’s Hall’ is five times older than thought
22 votes -
DNA shows Pompeii’s dead aren’t who we thought they were
17 votes -
Notes on Guyana
8 votes -
How China is like the 19th century US
12 votes -
Lost Mayan city found in Mexico jungle
47 votes -
A very deep history of Halloween
17 votes -
Researchers have connected the identity of skeletal remains found in a well at Norway's Sverresborg castle to a passage in a centuries-old Norse text
18 votes -
Lost Silk Road cities unearthed in Uzbekistan's high mountains
15 votes -
Navajo code talker who helped allies win World War II dies aged 107
30 votes -
Why did Norway try to take Greenland from Denmark in 1931?
3 votes -
Investigating the most extreme ancient village in the United States
9 votes -
Archaeologists are investigating the possibility Vikings used shortcuts over land to help them move warships and smaller boats around Scotland's west coast
12 votes -
A trail gone cold
7 votes -
Secret tomb found under ‘Indiana Jones’ holy grail filming location in Petra
24 votes