1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Benky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:13,840 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is 3 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,280 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:39,360 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Since the dawn of time, civilizations have looked 7 00:00:39,360 --> 00:00:42,440 Speaker 1: to the stars for guidance. The Egyptians used two stars 8 00:00:42,479 --> 00:00:45,640 Speaker 1: that circled the celestial poll in order to build the pyramids. 9 00:00:45,920 --> 00:00:48,320 Speaker 1: Sailors used the position of the stars in the sky 10 00:00:48,440 --> 00:00:51,400 Speaker 1: in relation to the horizon to keep their ships on course. 11 00:00:52,159 --> 00:00:54,120 Speaker 1: And even though we have some of the most advanced 12 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:57,800 Speaker 1: technology in the world to perform these calculations for us today, 13 00:00:58,200 --> 00:01:03,280 Speaker 1: scientists and engineers still consult the night sky or unbelievable results. 14 00:01:04,880 --> 00:01:07,840 Speaker 1: Many people don't know that the Earth wobbles. I'm not 15 00:01:07,880 --> 00:01:11,319 Speaker 1: talking about earthquakes, though. This is something different. As the 16 00:01:11,360 --> 00:01:15,280 Speaker 1: planet turns on one axis, it moves more slowly along another, 17 00:01:15,680 --> 00:01:19,680 Speaker 1: completing one rotation along this secondary axis every twenty six 18 00:01:19,760 --> 00:01:24,759 Speaker 1: thousand years. It's called the axial procession. A long time ago, 19 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:27,720 Speaker 1: architects built a monument to honor the men who had 20 00:01:27,760 --> 00:01:32,039 Speaker 1: died building a massive structure, Two bronze statues sat elevated 21 00:01:32,080 --> 00:01:35,360 Speaker 1: with thirty foot wings pointed straight at the sky. Some 22 00:01:35,520 --> 00:01:38,440 Speaker 1: considered them to be angels, while others saw them as 23 00:01:38,480 --> 00:01:42,160 Speaker 1: the best versions of ourselves watching over us. And below 24 00:01:42,200 --> 00:01:45,840 Speaker 1: their massive feet was a celestial map which had been 25 00:01:45,840 --> 00:01:48,600 Speaker 1: etched into the surface using the position of the stars 26 00:01:48,640 --> 00:01:53,440 Speaker 1: in relation to the Earth's axial procession. It was as 27 00:01:53,520 --> 00:01:55,640 Speaker 1: much a work of arts as it was a feat 28 00:01:55,680 --> 00:01:58,760 Speaker 1: of engineering, and only an expert astronomer would have been 29 00:01:58,760 --> 00:02:01,320 Speaker 1: able to create such a piece. Along the bottom of 30 00:02:01,320 --> 00:02:04,760 Speaker 1: the map, two stars were highlighted, Fuban, the north star 31 00:02:04,960 --> 00:02:08,400 Speaker 1: used by the ancient Egyptians, and Polaris, what we consider 32 00:02:08,520 --> 00:02:12,359 Speaker 1: to be the north star today. These stars were encapsulated 33 00:02:12,400 --> 00:02:14,919 Speaker 1: within a circle, the kind that might be drawn by 34 00:02:14,919 --> 00:02:17,640 Speaker 1: the Earth as it turned on its axis over twenty 35 00:02:17,680 --> 00:02:22,440 Speaker 1: six thousand years, and just outside that circle was another star, Vega, 36 00:02:22,720 --> 00:02:25,800 Speaker 1: which will be our north star in roughly twelve thousand years. 37 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:29,000 Speaker 1: But what made this map truly special was not its 38 00:02:29,080 --> 00:02:32,200 Speaker 1: level of detail or artistry. It was that the architect 39 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:34,880 Speaker 1: who designed it was able to line up the selexial 40 00:02:34,960 --> 00:02:39,000 Speaker 1: axis with polaris on the exact day of the monument's commemoration. 41 00:02:40,240 --> 00:02:42,960 Speaker 1: And look, I know that's a lot of visualization for 42 00:02:43,000 --> 00:02:47,000 Speaker 1: you to attempt. I'm asking you to imagine something incredibly complex, 43 00:02:47,040 --> 00:02:49,560 Speaker 1: and I get that. But if you ever have the chance, 44 00:02:49,680 --> 00:02:52,600 Speaker 1: you can visit it, because the map is still in place, 45 00:02:52,960 --> 00:02:56,079 Speaker 1: and it probably will be for another thousand years or more. 46 00:02:56,639 --> 00:02:59,760 Speaker 1: After all, it's only eighty five years old. The sea, 47 00:02:59,800 --> 00:03:02,360 Speaker 1: it's you just need to visit the Nevada side of 48 00:03:02,400 --> 00:03:06,480 Speaker 1: the Hoover Dam. The monument was erected to honor the 49 00:03:06,520 --> 00:03:10,520 Speaker 1: one twelve lives lost during the dam's construction. The celestial 50 00:03:10,560 --> 00:03:14,560 Speaker 1: map was the creation of Norwegian sculptor Oscar J. W. Hanson, 51 00:03:14,680 --> 00:03:17,440 Speaker 1: who designed it as a way for astronomers to deduce 52 00:03:17,520 --> 00:03:20,680 Speaker 1: the exact date of the dam's dedication by President Franklin 53 00:03:20,720 --> 00:03:25,000 Speaker 1: Delano Roosevelt. That way, if all records were destroyed, there 54 00:03:25,000 --> 00:03:27,280 Speaker 1: would still be this map to use as a means 55 00:03:27,280 --> 00:03:31,679 Speaker 1: of calculation. The map also provides a way to calculate 56 00:03:31,720 --> 00:03:34,040 Speaker 1: the procession of the Pole Star for the next fourteen 57 00:03:34,080 --> 00:03:37,680 Speaker 1: thousand years. And as if that weren't enough, the techniques 58 00:03:37,800 --> 00:03:40,640 Speaker 1: used by Hansen to create his map, are currently being 59 00:03:40,760 --> 00:03:44,160 Speaker 1: used in another modern marvel, the Clock of the Long 60 00:03:44,280 --> 00:03:48,280 Speaker 1: now also known as the ten thousand year Clock. This 61 00:03:48,480 --> 00:03:51,640 Speaker 1: five hundred foot tall clock was the brainchild of inventor 62 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:55,640 Speaker 1: Danny Hills in nine six. The full size version will 63 00:03:55,680 --> 00:03:58,360 Speaker 1: be built within a mountain in Texas and run for 64 00:03:58,480 --> 00:04:01,720 Speaker 1: ten thousand years. It will be powered by manual winding, 65 00:04:01,880 --> 00:04:05,080 Speaker 1: like a simple watch, but will store energy from temperature 66 00:04:05,160 --> 00:04:09,640 Speaker 1: changes in order to keep running between windings. Aside from 67 00:04:09,640 --> 00:04:12,320 Speaker 1: the standard time and date, the ten year clock will 68 00:04:12,360 --> 00:04:14,920 Speaker 1: also track the phases of the moon, the position of 69 00:04:14,960 --> 00:04:18,000 Speaker 1: the stars and planets, and calculate the procession of the 70 00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:21,760 Speaker 1: Earth's axis, just like hansen celestial map. And if you 71 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:24,080 Speaker 1: want to see it, there's a working prototype of the 72 00:04:24,120 --> 00:04:27,720 Speaker 1: clock on display at the Science Museum in London. It's 73 00:04:27,800 --> 00:04:30,159 Speaker 1: a lot smaller than the real clock will be, but 74 00:04:30,200 --> 00:04:34,000 Speaker 1: even at such a tiny scale it works exactly as advertised. 75 00:04:34,279 --> 00:04:37,440 Speaker 1: It came to life on New Year's Eve in just 76 00:04:37,560 --> 00:04:40,680 Speaker 1: in time to ring in the new millennium. And I 77 00:04:40,760 --> 00:04:43,800 Speaker 1: know what you're thinking, will the full size clock live 78 00:04:43,880 --> 00:04:46,880 Speaker 1: up to its name and actually run for another ten 79 00:04:46,960 --> 00:04:50,960 Speaker 1: thousand years? And the answer, as you might imagine is 80 00:04:51,000 --> 00:05:08,000 Speaker 1: fairly simple. Only time will tell. When we think of 81 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:10,760 Speaker 1: cursed objects, we think of items that have been stolen 82 00:05:10,800 --> 00:05:14,560 Speaker 1: from sacred places, such as King Tut's golden sarcophagus or 83 00:05:14,640 --> 00:05:17,520 Speaker 1: the Hope diamond. These objects have been long rumored to 84 00:05:17,560 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 1: bring deadly misfortune to all who came in contact with them. 85 00:05:21,800 --> 00:05:25,799 Speaker 1: For example, Egyptologist Howard Carter, the man responsible for opening 86 00:05:25,839 --> 00:05:28,919 Speaker 1: tuts to him, died of blood poisoning five months later 87 00:05:28,960 --> 00:05:33,400 Speaker 1: after an unfortunate mosquito bites. But twenty years after Carter's demise, 88 00:05:33,680 --> 00:05:37,760 Speaker 1: another curse arose thousands of miles away from the Egyptian Pyramids. 89 00:05:39,200 --> 00:05:41,520 Speaker 1: It was caused by a sphere about three and a 90 00:05:41,560 --> 00:05:44,719 Speaker 1: half inches in diameter. It was comprised of two halves 91 00:05:44,760 --> 00:05:48,120 Speaker 1: of plutonium gallium held together in the middle by a ring. 92 00:05:48,880 --> 00:05:52,920 Speaker 1: It was the fourteen pound core of a devastating nuclear device. 93 00:05:53,839 --> 00:05:56,240 Speaker 1: The plan was to drop this new bomb on Japan 94 00:05:56,320 --> 00:05:59,799 Speaker 1: on August nineteen, but the country surrendered four days earlier 95 00:06:00,040 --> 00:06:03,039 Speaker 1: and brought World War Two to an end. The core, however, 96 00:06:03,080 --> 00:06:07,480 Speaker 1: it was still ready to go. On August. The physicist 97 00:06:07,560 --> 00:06:10,320 Speaker 1: named Harry Dalyan was performing tests on the core at 98 00:06:10,320 --> 00:06:13,960 Speaker 1: a facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico. Harry had worked 99 00:06:13,960 --> 00:06:17,440 Speaker 1: on the Manhattan Project and with stacking reflective bricks made 100 00:06:17,440 --> 00:06:21,440 Speaker 1: of tungsten carbide around the spear. With each brick he placed, 101 00:06:21,680 --> 00:06:24,160 Speaker 1: neutrons would bounce off of them and then back at 102 00:06:24,160 --> 00:06:27,440 Speaker 1: the core. Henry would then use the neutron reflections to 103 00:06:27,440 --> 00:06:30,320 Speaker 1: gauge how close the core was to going super critical. 104 00:06:32,000 --> 00:06:34,640 Speaker 1: Harry was by himself while he was performing these tests, 105 00:06:34,839 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 1: save for the loan security guards sitting several feet away. 106 00:06:38,480 --> 00:06:41,440 Speaker 1: As he stacked the bricks, one slipped and fell onto 107 00:06:41,480 --> 00:06:44,839 Speaker 1: the core, releasing a lethal dose of radiation into the air. 108 00:06:45,440 --> 00:06:47,640 Speaker 1: He pulled out the brick, but it was too late. 109 00:06:47,920 --> 00:06:50,200 Speaker 1: He'd taken the brunt of the blast and died of 110 00:06:50,279 --> 00:06:54,640 Speaker 1: radiation poisoning less than a month later. One year after 111 00:06:54,720 --> 00:06:57,960 Speaker 1: that accident, physicist Louis Laughton was showing a few other 112 00:06:58,040 --> 00:07:01,440 Speaker 1: Los Alamos scientists how to properly handle the core. He'd 113 00:07:01,440 --> 00:07:04,080 Speaker 1: done it several times before and had become known as 114 00:07:04,120 --> 00:07:08,000 Speaker 1: an expert around the facility. Instead of using bricks, like Harry, though, 115 00:07:08,200 --> 00:07:11,040 Speaker 1: Louis placed two halves of a beryllium shell around the 116 00:07:11,080 --> 00:07:14,520 Speaker 1: core to act as a neutron reflector. The only catch 117 00:07:14,640 --> 00:07:17,280 Speaker 1: was that the shell could not be allowed to seal completely. 118 00:07:17,600 --> 00:07:20,280 Speaker 1: If it did, the core would go super critical and 119 00:07:20,440 --> 00:07:24,200 Speaker 1: unleash a wave of radiation. Louis was supposed to use 120 00:07:24,240 --> 00:07:26,800 Speaker 1: shims to keep the house separate, but he liked to 121 00:07:26,840 --> 00:07:30,160 Speaker 1: live on the edge. His preferred method was a screwdriver 122 00:07:30,400 --> 00:07:34,680 Speaker 1: wedged in between the hemispheres. One day, while shadowed by 123 00:07:34,680 --> 00:07:38,320 Speaker 1: a pupil named Alvin C. Graves, Louis placed his screwdriver 124 00:07:38,440 --> 00:07:40,640 Speaker 1: on the bottom half and then lowered the top half 125 00:07:40,680 --> 00:07:43,920 Speaker 1: down over the core. But the screwdriver slipped and the 126 00:07:43,920 --> 00:07:47,280 Speaker 1: shell closed around the core, completely sealing it in, and 127 00:07:47,360 --> 00:07:50,680 Speaker 1: within a heartbeat it went super critical. A blast of 128 00:07:50,720 --> 00:07:54,000 Speaker 1: blue light washed over Louis as he wedged the screwdriver 129 00:07:54,120 --> 00:07:56,800 Speaker 1: back in to separate them, but by then it was 130 00:07:56,840 --> 00:08:01,000 Speaker 1: too late. Louis had absorbed almost all of radiation given 131 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:03,240 Speaker 1: off by the core. He died a week and a 132 00:08:03,280 --> 00:08:07,000 Speaker 1: half later. After this second incident, no one else ever 133 00:08:07,120 --> 00:08:10,120 Speaker 1: handled the sphere directly again. Any tests that had been 134 00:08:10,120 --> 00:08:13,400 Speaker 1: planned for it were postponed until it was less radioactive. 135 00:08:14,120 --> 00:08:16,240 Speaker 1: In the end, they had to invent new equipment to 136 00:08:16,280 --> 00:08:19,160 Speaker 1: handle it, including machines that could be operated from a 137 00:08:19,240 --> 00:08:23,040 Speaker 1: quarter mile away. TV cameras would broadcast everything to the 138 00:08:23,080 --> 00:08:26,160 Speaker 1: scientists operating those machines so that they could see what 139 00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:28,560 Speaker 1: they were doing. It was a lot of work to 140 00:08:28,640 --> 00:08:31,400 Speaker 1: keep up the studies, though, and soon enough the project 141 00:08:31,480 --> 00:08:34,360 Speaker 1: was cut. The Demon Core, as it had come to 142 00:08:34,400 --> 00:08:38,160 Speaker 1: be known, was eventually melted down and incorporated into other 143 00:08:38,280 --> 00:08:43,040 Speaker 1: nuclear devices. Most people see these tragic deaths as the 144 00:08:43,120 --> 00:08:46,760 Speaker 1: unfortunate consequences of breaking the rules, the rules of the 145 00:08:46,840 --> 00:08:49,960 Speaker 1: lab and the rules of physics, but some see the 146 00:08:49,960 --> 00:08:53,960 Speaker 1: Demon Core as a warning. After all, they claim that 147 00:08:54,080 --> 00:08:58,439 Speaker 1: much power was simply never meant to be possessed. Stripped 148 00:08:58,480 --> 00:09:02,280 Speaker 1: of its modern decorations, it's easy to think that Howard 149 00:09:02,320 --> 00:09:06,360 Speaker 1: Carter would have had a different word for it, a curse. 150 00:09:10,320 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 1: I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet 151 00:09:13,040 --> 00:09:16,920 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn 152 00:09:16,960 --> 00:09:21,560 Speaker 1: more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. 153 00:09:21,559 --> 00:09:25,120 Speaker 1: The show was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership 154 00:09:25,200 --> 00:09:28,480 Speaker 1: with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show 155 00:09:28,559 --> 00:09:32,640 Speaker 1: called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, 156 00:09:32,920 --> 00:09:34,800 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 157 00:09:34,960 --> 00:09:39,719 Speaker 1: World of lore dot com, and until next time, stay curious, 158 00:09:40,480 --> 00:09:40,560 Speaker 1: ye