This Week's ✨

This Week's ✨

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In 1979 the United States dropped its 77-ton Skylab space station out of orbit and could not say where it would land, scattering debris across Western Australia — and the tiny shire of Esperance, surveying the wreckage, fined the superpower $400 for littering, a ticket America left unpaid for 30 years. - 19FortyFive
In 1979 the United States dropped its 77-ton Skylab space station out of orbit and could not say where it would land, scattering debris across Western Australia — and the tiny shire of Esperance, surveying the wreckage, fined the superpower $400 for littering, a ticket America left unpaid for 30 years. - 19FortyFive
·19fortyfive.com·
In 1979 the United States dropped its 77-ton Skylab space station out of orbit and could not say where it would land, scattering debris across Western Australia — and the tiny shire of Esperance, surveying the wreckage, fined the superpower $400 for littering, a ticket America left unpaid for 30 years. - 19FortyFive
The Korean alphabet, called Hangul, is the only major writing system in human history with a known inventor and a documented design rationale — created in 1443 by King Sejong of the Joseon dynasty, who designed each consonant to physically represent the position of the tongue and lips during the corresponding sound, and published a companion document explaining exactly why each letter looked the way it did
The Korean alphabet, called Hangul, is the only major writing system in human history with a known inventor and a documented design rationale — created in 1443 by King Sejong of the Joseon dynasty, who designed each consonant to physically represent the position of the tongue and lips during the corresponding sound, and published a companion document explaining exactly why each letter looked the way it did
·spacedaily.com·
The Korean alphabet, called Hangul, is the only major writing system in human history with a known inventor and a documented design rationale — created in 1443 by King Sejong of the Joseon dynasty, who designed each consonant to physically represent the position of the tongue and lips during the corresponding sound, and published a companion document explaining exactly why each letter looked the way it did