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The countries with the tallest people in the world, ranked

Sultan Kosen is very tall compared to the two children standing on a short wall next to him as he holds a cane and one of their hands
Sultan Kösen poses next to two children in 2024.

Waleed Zein/Anadolu via Getty Images

  • Height varies widely around the world, but some countries tend to have taller citizens.
  • Using medical data, Business Insider found the mean heights for the 25 tallest countries.
  • Many European countries made the list, including Germany, Poland, and Croatia

Sultan Kösen, who hails from Turkey, is nearly 8 feet 3 inches tall and may be the tallest person on the planet.

Despite his impressive stature, his country isn't among those with the tallest people, according to the medical database from the NCD Risk Factor Collaboration.

From 1985 to 2019, the project collected height, blood pressure, cholesterol levels, and other health metrics from over 2,500 population surveys across 193 countries.

The NCD lists the mean heights for 19-year-old men and women in each country. Averaging these two figures gives a rough idea of how tall the typical person is in the country.

Notably, the US isn't on the list. It ranked 58th for women, at 5 feet 4.29 inches (163.3 cm), and 47th for men at 5 feet 9.65 inches (176.9 cm).

These are the 25 countries that (literally) came out on top.

25. Greece's mean height is 5 feet 7.93 inches (172.55 cm).
John Aniston and Jennifer Aniston at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City, New York (Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)
John Aniston, an actor and the late father of Jennifer Aniston, was born on the island of Crete in Greece.

Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

The mean height for men from Greece is 5 feet 10.59 inches (179.3 cm).

The mean height for women from Greece is 5 feet 5.28 inches (165.8 cm).

24. Austria's mean height is 5 feet 7.99 inches (172.7 cm).
Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) poses after receiving from US actor Danny DeVito his lifetime achievement award at the annual German film and television award ceremony Golden Camera.
Austrian-born Arnold Schwarzenegger, who's about 6 feet 2 inches tall, starred alongside Danny DeVito in the 1988 movie "Twins."

CHRISTIAN CHARISIUS/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Austria is 5 feet 10.28 inches (178.5 cm).

The mean height for women from Austria is 5 feet 5.71 inches (166.9 cm).

22. Belarus' mean height is 5 feet 8.03 inches (172.8 cm).
Victoria Azarenka
The 6-foot Belarusian tennis player Victoria Azarenka used her height to her advantage on the court.

THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images

The mean height for men from Belarus is 5 feet 10.35 inches (178.7 cm).

The mean height for women from Belarus is 5 feet 5.71 inches (166.9 cm).

22. Cook Islands' mean height is 5 feet 8.03 inches (172.8 cm).
Three women in brightly colored clothing and headware stand and wave on a beach on Cook Island
The Cook Islands, located in the South Pacific, aren't far from French Polynesia.

iStock via Getty Images Plus

The mean height for men from the Cook Islands is 5 feet 10.19 inches (178.3 cm).

The mean height for women from the Cook Islands is 5 feet 5.87 inches (167.3 cm).

21. Bermuda's mean height is 5 feet 8.07 inches (172.9 cm).
Daren Herbert on stage acting in The Wild Party, a musical
Bermuda-born actor and dancer Daren Herbert has appeared in many TV shows and movies.

Rick Madonik/Toronto Star via Getty Images

The mean height for men from Bermuda is 5 feet 10.75 inches (179.7 cm).

The mean height for women from Bermuda is 5 feet 5.39 inches (166.1 cm).

19. Poland's mean height is 5 feet 8.21 inches (173.25 cm).
Poland Entry Blanka performs "Solo" on stage during The Eurovision Song Contest 2023 Grand Final at M&S Bank Arena on in Liverpool, England
In the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest, singer Blanka, center, represented Poland.

Anthony Devlin/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Poland is 5 feet 11.14 inches (180.7 cm).

The mean height for women from Poland is 5 feet 5.28 inches (165.8 cm).

19. Germany's mean height is 5 feet 8.21 inches (173.25 cm).
angela merkel
Former German chancellor Angela Merkel is a similar height to many other women in her country.

Omer Messinger-Pool/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Germany is 5 feet 10.98 inches (180.3 cm).

The mean height for women from Germany is 5 feet 5.43 inches (166.2 cm).

18. Norway's mean height is 5 feet 8.29 inches (173.45 cm).
Magnus Carlsen looks up from the chess board during a match in 2021.
Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen adds a bit to his height when he styles his hair a certain way.

Jon Gambrell/AP Images

The mean height for men from Norway is 5 feet 11.06 inches (180.5 cm).

The mean height for women from Norway is 5 feet 5.51 inches (166.4 cm).

16. Finland's mean height is 5 feet 8.33 inches (173.55 cm).
finland happy
A man holds a Finnish flag.

Vesa Moilanen/Lehtikuva/Reuters

The mean height for men from Finland is 5 feet 11.1 inches (180.6 cm).

The mean height for women from Finland is 5 feet 5.55 inches (166.5 cm).

16. Dominica's mean height is 5 feet 8.33 inches (173.55 cm).
Danny John-Jules and Petula Langlais dressed up and holding wine at the inaugural Visionary Honours Awards in 2019
"Death in Paradise" star Danny John-Jules, pictured with Petula Langlais, was born in London and both his parents are from Dominica.

Dave Benett/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Dominica is 5 feet 10.94 inches (180.2 cm).

The mean height for women from Dominica is 5 feet 5.71 inches (166.9 cm).

 

 

 

15. Sweden's mean height is 5 feet 8.35 inches (173.6 cm).
Soccer player Zlatan Ibrahimović wears a white jersey and shorts on the soccer field and spreads his arms wide
Swede Zlatan Ibrahimović, a former soccer player, is 6 feet 5 inches tall. Shaun Clark/Getty Images

Shaun Clark/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Sweden is 5 feet 11.06 inches (180.5 cm).

The mean height for women from Sweden is 5 feet 5.63 inches (166.7 cm).

 

 

 

13. Ukraine's mean height is 5 feet 8.43 inches (173.8 cm).
(L-R) Maksim Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd attend the 2021 World Choreography Awards
"Dancing with the Stars" alum Maksim Chmerkovskiy, pictured with Peta Murgatroyd, moved to the US from Ukraine as a teen.

Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Ukraine is 5 feet 11.26 inches (181 cm).

The mean height for women from Ukraine is 5 feet 5.59 inches (166.6 cm).

13. Croatia's mean height is 5 feet 8.43 inches (173.8 cm).
Slavica Ecclestone and Bernie Ecclestone under a green-and-white umbrella at the British Grand Prix in 2008
Croatian former model Slavica Ecclestone, pictured with her ex-husband, Bernie Ecclestone, is toweringly tall.

Crispin Thruston/Action Images via Reuters

The mean height for men from Croatia is 5 feet 11.18 inches (180.8 cm).

The mean height for women from Croatia is 5 feet 5.67 inches (166.8 cm).

12. Slovakia's mean height is 5 feet 8.52 inches (174.05 cm).
Slovakia's Petra Vlhova celebrates at the finish area of an alpine ski, women's parallel slalom World Cup in St. Moritz, Switzerland, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2019
Petra Vlhová, Slovakia's first alpine skier to win an Olympic medal, is nearly 6 feet tall.

AP Photo/Sergio Bisi

The mean height for men from Slovakia is 5 feet 11.26 inches (181 cm).

The mean height for women from Slovakia is 5 feet 5.79 inches (167.1 cm).

11. Slovenia's mean height is 5 feet 8.54 inches (174.1 cm).
Slovenia's President Natasa Pirc Musar and Kosovo's President Vjosa Osmani-Sadriu talk as they pose for a photo during the Brdo-Brijuni Process in Skopje, North Macedonia in 2023
Slovenia's president, Nataša Pirc Musar, poses with Kosovo's president, Vjosa Osmani.

REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski

The mean height for men from Slovenia is 5 feet 11.26 inches (181 cm).

The mean height for women from Slovenia is 5 feet 5.83 inches (167.2 cm).

10. Lithuania's mean height is 5 feet 8.56 inches (174.15 cm).
Wearing a black warm-up outfit Lithuania's Ruta Meilutyte celebrates on the podium after winning the women's 50m breastroke final at the Fukuoka 2023 World Aquatics Championships
Rūta Meilutytė has broken several swimming records and won an Olympic gold medal for Lithuania.

REUTERS/Issei Kato

The mean height for men from Lithuania is 5 feet 11.14 inches (180.7 cm).

The mean height for women from Lithuania is 5 feet 5.98 inches (167.6 cm).

9. Serbia's mean height is 5 feet 8.7 inches (174.5 cm).
Serbian Prime Minister and leader of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) Aleksandar Vucic wears a suit and gestures during a rally ahead of the 2016 election in Belgrade
Serbia's president, Aleksandar Vučić, is well over 6 feet tall.

REUTERS/Marko Djurica

The mean height for men from Serbia is 5 feet 11.14 inches (180.7 cm).

The mean height for women from Serbia is 5 feet 6.26 inches (168.3 cm).

8. Czech Republic's mean height is 5 feet 8.74 inches (174.6 cm).
Madeleine Albright stands in front of a microphone in front of shelves of books in 2012
Born in Prague in what is now the Czech Republic, the late Madeleine Albright was the first woman to serve as the US Secretary of State.

E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

The mean height for men from the Czech Republic is 5 feet 11.34 inches (181.2 cm).

The mean height for women from the Czech Republic is 5 feet 6.14 inches (168 cm).

6. Bosnia and Herzegovina's mean height is 5 feet 8.9 inches (175 cm).
Athletes from Bosnia and Herzegovina make their entrance at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Athletes from Bosnia and Herzegovina at the opening ceremony for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

The mean height for men from Bosnia & Herzegovina is 5 feet 11.85 inches (182.5 cm).

The mean height for women from Bosnia & Herzegovina is 5 feet 5.94 inches (167.5 cm).

6. Latvia's mean height is 5 feet 8.9 inches (175 cm).
Athletes from Latvia make their entrance at the Summer Olympics.
Latvian athletes make their entrance at the 2020 Summer Olympics.

Hannah McKay/Pool Photo via AP

The mean height for men from Latvia is 5 feet 11.34 inches (181.2 cm).

The mean height for women from Latvia is 5 feet 6.46 inches (168.8 cm).

5. Iceland's mean height is 5 feet 9.09 inches (175.5 cm).
Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson and fitness expert Natalie Eva Marie are dressed in costumes at the launch of Monster Energy’s new performance beverage REIGN Total Body Fuel in 2019 in New York City.
A few inches shy of 7 feet, "Game of Thrones" actor Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson, pictured with professional wrestler Natalie Eva Marie, was born in Reykjavík, Iceland.

Brian Ach/Getty Images for REIGN Total Body Fuel

The mean height for men from Iceland is 5 feet 11.69 inches (182.1 cm).

The mean height for women from Iceland is 5 feet 6.5 inches (168.9 cm).

4. Denmark's mean height is 5 feet 9.17 inches (175.7 cm).
Mads Mikkelsen in a tuxedo at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival
Trained as a gymnast, Mads Mikkelsen began his acting career in his native Denmark.

Joel C. Ryan/AP

The mean height for men from Denmark is 5 feet 11.61 inches (181.9 cm).

The mean height for women from Denmark is 5 feet 6.73 inches (169.5 cm).

3. Estonia's mean height is 5 feet 9.19 inches (175.75 cm).
Miss Estonia, Jana Tafenau, wears a black vest, white button-down shirt, and red skirt on stage at the 2002 Miss Universe pageant.
Miss Estonia Jana Tafenau performs at the 2002 Miss Universe pageant.

Jose Jimenez/Primera Hora/Getty Images

The mean height for men from Estonia is 5 feet 11.97 inches (182.8 cm).

The mean height for women from Estonia is 5 feet 6.42 inches (168.7 cm).

2. Montenegro's mean height is 5 feet 9.55 inches (176.65 cm).
Montenegro`s Mirko Vucinic (L) celebrates with Nikola Vukcevic and Fatos Baciraj (R) after scoring a goal during their Euro 2016 qualifying soccer match in Podgorica, Montenegro in 2015.
Montenegro`s soccer team competes during the Euro 2016 qualifying soccer match.

REUTERS/Stevo Vasiljevic

The mean height for men from Montenegro is 6 feet 0.17 inches (183.3 cm).

The mean height for women from Montenegro is 5 feet 6.93 inches (170 cm).

 

 

1. The Netherlands's mean height is 5 feet 9.72 inches (177.1 cm).
King Willem-Alexander in a suit and blue tie and Queen Maxima in a red dress with a sparkly dragonfly pin on her shoulder stand next to each other
The Netherlands' King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima are typical heights for their country.

Patrick van Katwijk/Getty Images

The mean height for men from the Netherlands is 6 feet 0.36 inches (183.8 cm).

The mean height for women from the Netherlands is 5 feet 7.09 inches (170.4 cm).

A note on mean versus average heights: Using mean heights instead of averages gives a sense of which countries have the most people who are tall. For example, many Icelandic men are 5 feet 11 inches. 

The list would look different ranked by average heights. The Federal Statistical Office of Germany calculates heights by average, for example, and the results would bump the country up several spots in the rankings. 

This post was originally published in 2019 and was updated on December 18, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

How sports-tech power couple Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian make and spend their millions

Alexis Ohanian (center), Olympia Ohanian (left), and Serena Williams.
Alexis Ohanian (center), Olympia Ohanian (left), and Serena Williams.

Charles Krupa/AP

  • Serena Williams, one of the greatest athletes ever, is married to Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian.
  • Separately, they've accrued vast amounts of money thanks to their successful careers.
  • Their combined wealth allows them to make fascinating investments and lead a fabulous lifestyle.

Serena Williams is arguably the most dominant tennis player in the history of the sport, earning over $90 million in prize money throughout her career.

Alexis Ohanian founded the popular website Reddit and became a multimillionaire at age 23 when he sold it. 

The two met in May 2015, married shortly after, and have two children. Their estimated combined net worth is $330 million, which they spend on beautiful homes and a globe-trotting lifestyle. 

Take a look at how the sports-tech power couple make and spend their millions.

Serena Williams has a net worth of more than $260 million.
Serena Williams wears a white tennis dress and pink sleeves in front of a crowd
Serena Williams during the 2016 US Open.

Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

Her wealth, in large part, comes from earning more than $94 million in career prize money — considerably more than any other professional women's tennis player. 

Williams has also earned millions from endorsement deals.
A Nike advertisement on a large scale digital billboard on the exterior of the Outernet building featuring tennis champion Serena Williams in London reading "Been there, won that"
A Nike billboard featuring Serena Williams on display in London in July 2024.

Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images

She's partnered with Nike, Beats by Dre, Gatorade, Subway, Gucci, JPMorgan Chase, Tempur-Pedic, Ford, Aston Martin, Audemars Piguet, Intel, and Wilson.

In 2015, she debuted her own clothing line with HSN, the Serena Williams Signature Statement collection.
Serena Williams holds sunglasses on her face in front of a green Balmain Paris backdrop
Serena Williams attends the Balmain Ready To Wear Fall/Winter 2022-2023 fashion collection.

Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP

"I wanted to showcase a lot of fringe," she said, explaining the inspiration for her designs to Women's Wear Daily in 2015.

In May 2017, she began serving on the board of SurveyMonkey.
Serena Williams shown from the shoulders up wearing a sleeveless black dress
Serena Williams at the Taste of Tennis Gala in 2015.

Brad Barket/Getty Images for AYS

That year, she and the company conducted a survey looking at Americans' perceptions of the gender pay gap. On average, women continue to earn less than men, according to Pew Research.

Nike honored their longtime partnership with Williams by naming a building after her in 2022.
Serena Williams building Nike
The Serena Williams Building at Nike headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon.

Nike

Nike's headquarters, located in Beaverton, Oregon, includes a 1-million-square-foot building with 140 tennis courts, which Nike named the Serena Williams Building. Williams became a Nike athlete in 2003.

Will Smith played her father in "King Richard," the 2021 film that Williams executive produced along with her sister, Venus.
The cast of King richard
Will Smith played Richard Williams, Serena and Venus' father.

Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

The movie dramatized the sisters' childhood, when their father served as their coach and helped them rise to tennis stardom. Williams hoped sequels would follow, focusing on the ways Serena's and Venus' stories diverged, she told Business Insider in 2022.

In the summer of 2015, Williams began dating tech guru Alexis Ohanian.
Alexis Ohanian in a tux next to Serena Williams in a green dress
Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams pose together in 2017.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

The two married in 2017, less than two years after they met and a month after the birth of their first child. 

Williams told Vanity Fair she knew he was going to propose when he asked her to fly to Italy. "I was like, 'Serena, you're 35, you're ready. This is what you want,' " she remembered thinking.

Ohanian founded the popular social media platform Reddit in 2005.
Alexis Ohanian in a suit stands in front of many protesters holding signs reading "Stop PIPA"
Alexis Ohanian addresses protesters in 2012.

AP Photo/Richard Drew

A year later, he sold the site to Condé Nast for $10 million. He was 23 years old.

The Reddit deal instantly gave Ohanian more money than his parents had made their entire lives, he said.
alexis ohanian wears a suit and yellow tie on the Webby Awards red carpet
Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian at the Webby Awards in 2014.

Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Reddit is now worth billions. Ohanian later said the money was enticing because his mother was sick with terminal cancer at the time. 

"The deal was months in the making, and I wish I'd had more advisors around the table giving me more perspective on the sale," he wrote on Twitter, now X, in 2020.

After leaving Reddit in 2009, he had stints at various companies like the travel search site Hipmunk, the startup accelerator Y Combinator, and the social enterprise Breadpig.

Ohanian rejoined Reddit as an executive chairman in 2014 then resigned in 2020.
Alexis Ohanian on stage in front of a colorful red and green digital background
Alexis Ohanian speaks at Web Summit 2018.

Seb Daly/Web Summit via Getty Images

His resignation was in response to the site's long reputation as a platform for racist and misogynistic content, as well as for misinformation. He urged the company to fill his seat with a Black candidate instead.

Michael Seibel joined as the company's first Black board member days later.

After leaving Reddit, he focused on investing in new companies.
Alexis Ohanian sits on stage wearing red sneakers and mic
Alexis Ohanian speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2015.

Noam Galai/Getty Images

In 2020, Ohanian also left Initialized Capital, an early-stage venture capital firm he co-founded in 2011. 

A year later, he announced a new VC firm called "Seven Seven Six." 

The firm has invested in women's track and Colin Kaepernick's AI company. Previously, Ohanian pledged $1 million to Kaepernick's Know Your Rights Camp using his Reddit stock gains.

Ohanian has an estimated net worth of $70 million, giving the power couple a combined value of $330 million.
Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams got married in 2017.
Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams attend the 2019 Met Gala.

Mike Coppola/MG19/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

In 2019, Forbes estimated Ohanian's net worth was $70 million and put Williams' fortune at $260 million in 2022. 

The duo met in the spring of 2015 at the Cavalieri, a luxury hotel that boasts the only restaurant in Rome with three Michelin stars.
Serena Williams in a gray dress with Alexis Ohanian in a tux at the 2018 Brand Genius Awards
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian attend the 2018 Brand Genius Awards.

Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Ohanian sat down next to Williams outside by the pool, Vanity Fair reported in 2017. After trying to get him to move to a new table, she and her friends invited him to join them.

Ohanian had never watched Williams play — and wasn't much of a tennis fan — but he agreed to come to her match that night.

Ohanian and Williams went on their first date in Paris the following month.
The Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in the Jardin des Plantes in Paris
The Jardin des Plantes, a public park in Paris.

John S Lander/LightRocket via Getty Images

The pair walked around the Jardin des Plantes, and Ohanian bought Williams some candy. 

Two chaperones accompanied them on their first date, Williams' agent and assistant, Ohanian recently said on TikTok. 

Ohanian then went to watch her play in the French Open later that week.

Ohanian proposed at the Cavalieri — where they first met — on December 10, 2016.
A car and man wearing a suit and mask wait outside the Cavalieri hotel in Rome, Italy in 2022
The Cavalieri Hotel in Rome in 2022.

REUTERS/Remo Casilli

He got down on one knee at the same table where they had sat over a year before. 

Her engagement ring is reportedly worth more than $2 million.
Serena Williams holds a microphone in front of a purple background
Serena Williams speaks at the Pennsylvania Conference for Women in 2018.

Matt Rourke/AP

To pay for the 17-carat diamond, Ohanian used part of the $50 million he got from crypto exchange Coinbase and other investments, he told Forbes in 2023.

In 2017, Williams dominated the Australian Open while eight weeks pregnant.
Serena Williams with the with the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup at the 2017 Australian Open
Serena Williams at the 2017 Australian Open.

Scott Barbour/Getty

Ohanian cheered on Williams, who won her 23rd Grand Slam and earned $2.7 million.

Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr. was born in September 2017 and goes by Olympia.
Alexis Ohanian holds baby Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr. who is wearing a red and white headband with a re bow at at tennis match
Alexis Ohanian holds Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr in 2019.

AP Photo/Chuck Burton

Following in her mother's footsteps, Olympia is a burgeoning fashion icon.

Olympia became the youngest person to grace the cover of Vogue at three months old.

Williams and Ohanian purchased a piece of LA's Angel City soccer team and put a portion in Olympia's name.
Alexis Ohanian holds daughter Olympia Ohanian on his lap while watching a soccer game at at BMO Stadium
Alexis Ohanian and Alexis Olympia Ohanian before an Angel City FC match in 2023.

Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

At the time, Olympia, who was two, was the youngest owner of a professional sports team.

Nearly a month after Olympia's birth in 2017, Ohanian and Williams tied the knot in an opulent wedding in Louisiana.
Alexis Ohanian in a tux next to Serena Williams in an ombre pink, black, and white feathered wrap over a silver jumpsuit
Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams attend the 2021 Met Gala.

Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Williams wore an estimated $3.5 million worth of jewelry at the ceremony. For the reception, she changed into a pair of sparkly Nikes covered in Swarovski crystals.

Less than a year later, Williams and Ohanian attended one of the few ceremonies more extravagant than their own: the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle at Windsor Castle in England.
Serena Williams wears a pink dress next to Alexis Ohanian in a suit and gray tie
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian attend the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in 2018.

Shaun Botterill/Getty

Williams and Markle have been friends since 2014. 

"She quickly became a confidante I would text when I was traveling, the friend I would rally around for her tennis matches, and the down to earth chick I was able to grab lunch with just a couple weeks ago in Toronto," Markle wrote on her blog, The Tig, in 2014.

Williams and Ohanian have a mutual love of football.
Serena Williams and Venus Williams hold Dolphins jerseys with their names on them and the numbers 89 and 11
Serena and Venus Williams hold Dolphins jerseys in 2009.

Charles Trainor Jr./Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Williams and her sister, Venus, became partial owners of the Miami Dolphins in 2009.

And Ohanian's first purchase after selling Reddit was field-level season tickets to Washington's football franchise for himself and his father.
Alexis Ohanian in the stands at Allegiant Stadium wearing a black baseball cap
Alexis Ohanian attends a game between the Las Vegas Raiders and Washington Football Team in 2021.

Chris Unger/Getty Images

"My dad had two nosebleeds for a number of years, and I upgraded his seats to four seats at the front row around the 50-yard line," he told CNBC in 2018.

At one point, Ohanian, Williams, and Olympia lived in a $6.7 million home in Beverly Hills, California, but they've since listed that property for sale.
Alexis Ohanian and Serena Williams and their daughter Olympia all wear black on a red carpet with AFI film festival written on the black backdrop
Alexis Ohanian, Olympia Ohanian, and Serena Williams at the AFI Fest Gala Premiere of "King Richard" in 2021.

Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

The family purchased the 6,000-square-foot home in 2017. It has a bar, pool, and spacious kitchen but no tennis court

They spend most of their time in Florida, where they own a stunning property in Palm Beach Gardens. The house includes an art gallery and trophy room.

They also have homes in Paris and Bel Air. One of her houses has an entire closet dedicated to her shoe collection.

Williams also enjoys luxury cars.
Serena Williams carrying a baby carrier next to a light blue SUV
Serena Williams holds a baby carrier in 2017.

Alexander Tamargo/GC Images

When she was Aston Martin's chief sporting officer, she was photographed with a $300,000 Vanquish. In 2018, she became a brand ambassador for Lincoln. 

Not all of the couple's purchases are so pricey.
Alexis Ohanian wearing a black t-shirt and jacket against a black-and-white background
Alexis Ohanian attends WIRED25 Summit in 2018

Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for WIRED25

Ohanian also buys comics and video games.

Though they lead a lavish lifestyle, Ohanian and Williams are also very philanthropic.
Serena Williams in a sleveless beige suit against a vibrant pink background
Serena Williams attends the Viva Technology show in 2024.

Chesnot/Getty Images

In 2011, the United Nations Children's Fund appointed Williams as a goodwill ambassador. UNICEF noted her work in Ghana in 2006, handing out anti-malarial nets and promoting vaccinations. 

When Colin Kaepernick's 2018 Nike ad sparked controversy, she tweeted that she was "especially proud" to work with the brand. She previously voiced her support for the NFL player's activism as well. 

Ohanian is also an outspoken advocate for digital privacy.
Alexis Ohanian smiles in the crowd at the Australian Open
Alexis Ohanian cheers on Serena Williams at the 2019 Australian Open.

REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

In his 2013 book, "Without Their Permission," he imagined a dismal, not-too-distant future — in 2025 — where the notion of privacy had completely disappeared. 

He's also donated money to organizations working to diversify tech companies' talent pools. 

At the 2023 Met Gala, Williams announced she was pregnant with their second child.
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian attend the 2023 Met Gala.
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian attend the 2023 Met Gala.

Mike Coppola/Getty Images

The tennis player posted pictures of herself and Ohanian on Instagram, writing: "Was so excited when Anna Wintour invited the 3 of us to the Met Gala."

Adira River Ohanian was born on August 15, 2023.
Serena Williams wears a red-white-and-navy crop top with Alexis Ohanian who is wearing a white baseball hat and camo jacket
Serena Williams and Alexis Ohanian at the Leagues Cup match in July 2023, shortly before she gave birth to their second child.

Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

"Adira is a girl's name of Hebrew origin and means 'mighty,' 'strong,' and 'majestic.' The elegant name is popular in many cultures around the world," Williams wrote on Instagram on her daughter's first birthday. "Adira is the feminine form of the classic name Adir. It is a Biblical name, meaning 'Strong One.' "

The family travels the world together.
Serena Williams, Alexis Ohanian, and daughter Olympia in the crowd at the Paris Olympic Games
Serena Williams, Alexis Ohanian, and their daughter Olympia attend the Opening Ceremony of the Paris Olympic Games in 2024.

Karwai Tang/WireImage via Getty Images

Olympia accompanied her parents to the 2024 Olympics in Paris this summer and on an island-hopping vacation last winter.

In November, Ohanian revealed he'd undergone surgery to remove part of his thyroid.
Alexis Ohanian onstage seated in a white chair in front of a backdrop that reads Sportico Invest
Alexis Ohanian at Sportico's Invest in Sports New York in November 2024.

Bryan Bedder/Sportico via Getty Images

Doctors feared the nodules on his thyroid might be cancerous, so they removed half of the gland. 

"The worst part tbh has been not being able to lift for 2 weeks but big fella will be back at it next week and I took my girls to Disney World this week so life is wonderful," he wrote on Instagram.

He urged other men, especially fathers, to go to the doctor for regular checkups. Earlier this year, Ohanian was diagnosed with Lyme disease as well.

As the couple grew their family, Williams found it difficult to make time for her tennis career.
Serena Williams waves to a crowd wearing tennis whites and holding a large white bag
Serena Williams waves at Wimbledon in 2022.

AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali

 In August 2022, she announced her intention to retire after the US Open

"If I were a guy, I wouldn't be writing this because I'd be out there playing and winning while my wife was doing the physical labor of expanding our family," she wrote in an essay for Vogue.

At the end of her career, Williams was still the second-highest-paid woman in sports.
Serena Williams wearing a black tennis dress and holding a raquet on a court
Serena Williams competes at the US Open in 2022.

Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images

In 2021, she made $45.9 million. Most of that money came from endorsement deals and other ventures.

She said she has never been motivated by money and never thought about checks.
Serena Williams of the United States reacts during the Western & Southern Open.
Serena Williams during the Western & Southern Open in 2022.

Ian Johnson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

"I've actually never played for money — I just thought you would go out there and hold a trophy," Williams said on "Kneading Dough," a personal-finance video series, in 2018.

She tried to deposit her first million-dollar check through a bank drive-thru before the teller told her she needed to come inside for such a large transaction.

But there is plenty to come from Williams, who says she's passionate about investing in start-ups.
Serena Williams sits in a white chair on stage wearing a green dress in front of a blue backdrop
Serena Williams speaks during the New York Times DealBook Summit in December 2024.

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Along with Alison Stillman, Williams launched Serena Ventures in 2014. The firm's goal is to fund women and other founders who are underrepresented. 

"I've invested in over 85 companies, and I also have about 14 unicorns," Serena said in an April TikTok video. Unicorns are privately owned companies valued at over $1 billion

Some of her investments include MasterClass, Tonal, Impossible Foods, and Noom, Vogue reported in 2022.

Williams said she became interested in investing when she was shocked to learn that less than 2% of all venture capital money was invested in women.
Serena Williams attends the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscars party.
Serena Williams attends the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscars party.

Lionel Hahn/Getty Images

Williams told Forbes she had goals beyond just being an endorsement athlete, "I want to be in the infrastructure. I want to be the brand, instead of just being the face."


 

She's also still getting endorsement deals. In 2023, Williams appeared in two Super Bowl ads.
Serena Williams wears a red dress and jacket and holds a golf club
Serena Williams attends the Michelob Ultra & Netflix “Full Swing” Premiere & Super Bowl After Party in February 2023.

Daniel Boczarski/Getty Images for Michelob ULTRA

One was a "Caddyshack" homage for Michelob ULTRA, and the other was a locker room pep talk for Rémy Martin.

She also recently started her own beauty line, Wyn Beauty, and signed a deal with Penguin Random House to write two books.

The first is a memoir about her life, and the second is an inspirational book highlighting what she's learned as a philanthropist and an advocate for women and in her career as an investor with Serena Ventures. 

This story was originally published on May 2, 2023, and updated on December 17, 2024.

 

Read the original article on Business Insider

Meet the real J. Robert Oppenheimer's family, including his wife Kitty, 2 children, and grandchildren

Four people walk in front of a crumbling building, two men in suits and two women in skirts
Robert Oppenheimer and his wife, Katherine, and daughter, Toni, visit the Acropolis in Athens in 1958.

AP Photo

  • J. Robert Oppenheimer was the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory during the Manhattan Project.
  • During the World War II-era project,  scientists created the world's first atomic bomb.
  • Oppenheimer had a wife and two children. He also has grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Robert Oppenheimer led the Manhattan Project, which created the world's first atomic bomb for the United States during World War II.

He famously quoted the Hindu text "The Bhagavad Gita" following the first nuclear weapons test, saying: "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." Shortly after the US dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan, he resigned from the Manhattan Project. 

In 2023, Cillian Murphy portrayed the theoretical physicist in Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer." The film was met with huge critical acclaim, earning five awards at the 2024 Golden Globes, including best picture. It also won seven awards at the 2024 BAFTAS, with Cillian Murphy and Robert Downey Jr. taking home awards for best actor and best supporting actor, respectively.

In addition to Oppenheimer's nuclear work, the film looks at the scientist's complex personal life, including his marriage to Katherine Oppenheimer, née Puening.

Here's everything you need to know about the real Oppenheimer's family.

Katherine "Kitty" Oppenheimer was married three times before she married Oppenheimer.
Katherine Puening smiles in a photograph.
Katherine "Kitty" Oppenheimer, née Puening, smiles in a photograph.

Corbis/Getty Images

Katherine "Kitty" Oppenheimer, née Puening, married the scientist in 1940, only two years before he joined the Manhattan Project.

Kitty had been married three times before, as she wed musician Frank Ramseyer in 1932 before their marriage was annulled in 1933. 

Shortly afterward, in 1934, she was involved with the Communist Party of America, and became John Dullet Jr.'s. common-law wife when they lived together in Chicago, before separating in 1936.

Kitty then married Oxford doctor Richard Stewart Harrison in 1938, but had an affair with Oppenheimer while Harrison was working in California. She divorced Harrison in 1940, and married Oppenheimer a day later. 

They remained married until Oppenheimer's death from throat cancer in 1967, and Kitty scattered his ashes into the water by the island of St. John in the Virgin Islands, where they had spent plenty of time with their children, Peter and Toni.

Kitty spent the rest of her life with Robert Serber, another physicist from the Manhattan Project, whose wife had died by suicide. Kitty died in hospital in 1972, just as the pair had set out to go sailing to Japan, the Galapagos Islands, and Tahiti.

Peter Oppenheimer has spent most of his life on his father's ranch in New Mexico.
J. Robert Oppenheimer’s wife Katherine and children Katherine and Peter, circa 1940.
Peter Oppenheimer as a child.

Corbis/Getty Images

Oppenheimer had two children with his wife, Kitty. Their oldest child, Peter, was born in Pasadena, California, in May 1941, before the family moved to Los Alamos for the Manhattan Project.

When Peter was just two months old, the Oppenheimers left him with friends Haakon and Barbara Chevalier, according to "American Prometheus." Robert said his wife was exhausted. The couple then spent two months at the family's ranch, Perro Caliente, in New Mexico.

According to the Nuclear Museum, Peter struggled with anxiety as a child and didn't have a good relationship with his mother. 

"Robert thought that, in their highly charged, passionate, falling in love, that Peter had come too soon, and that Kitty resented him for that reason," Oppenheimer's secretary, Verna Hobson, said during a 1979 interview.

When his father died in 1967, Peter moved back to the family's Perro Caliente ranch in New Mexico. He's worked as a carpenter over the years and has three children.

Katherine "Toni" Oppenheimer died in 1977.
J. Robert Oppenheimer’s wife Katherine and children Katherine and Peter, circa 1940.
Katherine "Toni" Oppenheimer as a child.

Corbis/Getty Images

Toni Oppenheimer was born in 1944 and lived at Los Alamos until she was three. That's when her father became director of the Institute for Advanced Study and moved the family to Princeton, New Jersey.

As a baby, Toni lived with the Oppenheimers' friend Pat Sherr for several months. Robert visited regularly but asked if she wanted to adopt Toni, Sherr later recalled. When Sherr asked him why, he said, "Because I can't love her," adding that he wasn't "an attached kind of person." 

However, a childhood friend of Toni's described Robert as a "loving dad" in an April interview with The Winchester Star.

Toni had polio when she was young, which is largely why the family started visiting St. John in the Virgin Islands; the warmth seemed to help her condition.

Toni had a complicated relationship with her mother, largely because of Kitty's alcohol use. 

"She leaned on Toni an awful lot and it was difficult for her in that way, but she wanted only good and happiness for Toni," Hobson said of Kitty in 1979. 

Two years after Robert's death in 1967, the United Nations rejected Toni's application to become a translator. The FBI wouldn't grant her the appropriate security clearance for the job.

She struggled to cope with losing her father and her job opportunity, and after living on the island of St. John for a while, she died by suicide in January 1977, just a month after she turned 32.

Peter Oppenheimer had three children: Charles Oppenheimer, Dorothy Vanderford, and Ella Oppenheimer.
Charles Oppenheimer, speaks into a microphone while wearing a suit, against a green background
Charles Oppenheimer, grandson of US physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, during a press conference at the Japan National Press Club in 2024.

Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP via Getty Images

Although Toni didn't have any children before her death, Peter Oppenheimer has three: Charles, Ella, and Dorothy. 

Dorothy Vanderford, who was born in 1973, is Oppenheimer's oldest grandchild. She works in the nuclear industry and has a PhD in English. 

In 2023, she spoke to KSNV about the film and said that Christopher Nolan didn't consult the family about making his movie.

After seeing the movie, she said, "There were a few things that I didn't agree with and didn't like, but overall I felt like it was a good movie."

Charles Oppenheimer was born in 1975 and has worked in software development for many years. 

The youngest sibling, Ella, keeps her life private. 

Both Dorothy and Charles took part in a lengthy interview in 2015 about their grandfather for the Atomic Heritage Foundation.

At the time, Charles said that many historians find his grandfather a mysterious figure.

"In particular, people are having a hard time pinning down who this guy was. I guess it's made it difficult to deal with for the family, for some people. Not for me," he said.

Charles has two daughters with his wife, Karen Pak Oppenheimer, which means that Oppenheimer has at least two great-grandchildren.

Both Charles and his wife are co-executive directors of the Oppenheimer Project, which honors Robert's legacy. 

In a recent essay for The New York Times, Charles wrote that nuclear war would end the world as we know it. "I'm not afraid to be the voice calling for increased unity in the world, even though my grandfather was eventually attacked for this," he wrote.  

This story was originally published in July 2023 and was updated on December 17, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The Hanford Site is America's most contaminated nuclear location. See photos of its long, toxic past.

A grayish-white building with a tall circular chimney and dirt and roads surrounding it
Workers demolish a decommissioned nuclear reactor at Hanford in 2011.

Mark Ralston/AFP via Getty Images

  • The Hanford Site is the most polluted area in the US, though cleanup started decades ago.
  • Estimates say it will take decades more and up to $640 billion to finish the job.
  • The site just received record funding for cleanup, but the next administration may not follow suit.

Sitting on 586 square miles of desert in Washington, the Hanford Site has the most radioactive and chemical contamination in America.

Buried in storage tanks beneath the ground are 56 million gallons of radioactive waste. Many of them are leaking.

In the late 1990s, Washington's then-governor, Gary Locke, called Hanford "an underground Chernobyl waiting to happen," the Associated Press reported.

As part of the Manhattan Project, Hanford produced the plutonium to build Fat Man, the atomic weapon that was detonated above Nagasaki at the end of World War II, and for the United States' nuclear arsenal during the Cold War.

In 1989, after years of dismissing concerns about contamination, the site's management finally said the site needed to be cleaned up. But cleaning up nuclear waste is difficult. It can't be burned or buried. Soon, a waste management plant will turn the waste into glass, which can be stored away for thousands of years. It's a slow, costly process.

Yet time is of the essence. The longer the contaminated materials are left untreated, the worse they become. Plus, natural disasters could spread the site's contamination.

Here's how Hanford became so toxic.

Hanford is built on a desert in Washington, spread over 586 square miles.
An aerial view of several industrial buildings separated by roads and dirt fields
An aerial view of the Hanford nuclear site from 1995.

Department of Energy/Handout via REUTERS

During the Manhattan Project in the mid-1940s, Hanford was one of three main sites where thousands of workers developed and built the world's first atomic bombs.

The government wanted both secrecy and security and chose an isolated location, away from cities on the East Coast. It's about 150 miles southeast of Seattle.

The Columbia River passes Hanford to the north and the east by a few miles, and it's downstream from two dams.
The Columbia River with a bridge stretching across and surrounded by dirt on either side
The Columbia River flows under the Vernita Bridge near the Hanford Reach National Monument.

Elaine Thompson/AP

The government wanted the site to be close to dams for electricity and near the river so it had a source of liquid to cool the reactors. The rural setting meant the operation would have to displace fewer people.

The Hanford Nuclear Reservation began operating on September 26, 1944.
Large industrial buildings against a desert backdrop with smoke pouring from some areas
What was then known as the Hanford Engineering Works, in 1945.

Hulton-Deutsch/Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty Images

The government purchased the land in 1943 and gave about 2,000 locals, many of them farmers and Indigenous people, 30 days to leave, The New York Times reported.

One resident, Annette Heriford, later said the government paid far less than the land was worth, per the Atomic Heritage Foundation (AHF).

The first reactor took 11 months to build, and the majority of the 51,000-person workforce did not know what they were working on.
A group of people walk between buildings in front of a bus in the 1940s
Workers arriving at the Hanford Site in August 1945.

AP Photo

They understood their work was related to the war effort, but the site's role in building a nuclear weapon was top secret.

The area experienced swift growth in just a couple of years.
An African American man in a striped jumpsuit, glasses, and a hat holds a tire
A worker repairing an inner tube at the Hanford Site, circa 1944.

US Department of Energy/US War Department/National Park Service

There were so many workers that Hanford and nearby Richland swelled with thousands of new residents. Most were white men, but Hanford also employed Black, Indigenous, and Latino workers, in addition to white women, according to the National Park Service.

Hundreds of new buildings went up to accommodate the growing population, including banks, grocery stores, and cafeterias.

Some of these places were integrated, while others were segregated. Restaurants in the area barred Black workers from entering, Cascade PBS reported.

To keep the nuclear complex secret, the government barred trespassers and set up a buffer zone.
Sandy cliffs along a river
The White Bluffs near the Hanford Site.

Greg Vaughn /VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The area stretched along the Columbia River, covering hundreds of acres.

The B Reactor was the first large-scale nuclear reactor ever built.
A group of people, mostly men and mostly wearing hats, pose in two lines, with the first line crouching
Scientists, including Leona Marshall Libby, one of Hanford's few female scientists in the 1940s.

Department of Energy/National Park Service

It was the B Reactor that produced the first plutonium in the United States. The first supply of plutonium was delivered to the Army on February 2, 1945, just four months after the reactor began operating.

No one fully understood plutonium's effects on humans, wildlife, and the environment at the time.
A sign on a metal fence reading "radiation danger zone keep out"
An early warning sign at the Hanford Site.

US Department of Energy/National Park Service

The physicians working at Hanford reportedly knew radiation could cause illness, and they used dosimetry devices to monitor workers' exposure. They would wear badges containing photographic film that would develop an image of the protective case when exposed to radiation.

Hanford's plutonium was used in the Trinity test, the first detonated nuclear bomb.
A large fireball plumes upward from the desert
The Trinity Test, the first ever detonation of a nuclear device at Alamogordo, New Mexico in 1945.

Jack Aeby/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

Fat Man, the nuclear bomb that was detonated over Nagasaki, Japan on August 9, 1945, also contained Hanford's plutonium.

The bomb killed an estimated 50,000 people in Nagasaki, The BBC reported. Another 135,000 people died in Hiroshima, Japan, where the US dropped a uranium bomb a few days earlier.

Suddenly, Hanford's purpose was no longer a secret.
A woman painting a sign while sitting at a large desk by a sign that says "Danger: He is listening! Keep Hanford Business to yourself."
A Hanford worker paints a sign circa 1945 to 1955.

US Department of Energy/National Park Service

On August 6, 1945, Spokane, Washington, residents awoke to the news that Hanford was one of the secret sites responsible for the atomic bombs.

"Tongues wagged, workmen talked, nearly every truck driver who passed that way had his pet theory," The Spokane Daily Chronicle reported at the time. "Many may have guessed the correct answer. But still the riddle of Hanford remained — and the secret was kept."

After World War II, there was a brief production hiatus. But in 1948, plutonium became a priority again.
A worker in a white jumpsuit works on a large piece of equipment that reads metallographic cell
A scientist in protective clothing operates a polishing grinder at Hanford Site in 1957.

AP Photo/Ed Johnson

This time it was to supply the US with a nuclear arsenal during the Cold War. Six more reactors were built by 1955. Production continued into the late 1980s.

When the plant was up and running, using nine nuclear reactors and five reprocessing plants, it produced about 65% of the plutonium used by the US government.
A large cement structure with rubble inside
The Hanford Test Reactor, which was shut down in 1972.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

The reactors weren't all built at once but over a 20-year period from 1943 to 1963.

Hanford produced 67 metric tons of plutonium in all.
Three people in protective jumpsuits, gloves, and face masks work with nuclear material
Employees at the Hanford nuclear reload a camera used to photograph the inside of a radioactive tank.

FPG/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

That's a little less than the weight of 10 African elephants. Fat Man contained less than 14 pounds of plutonium, according to the Atomic Heritage Foundation.

The site was responsible for a large part of the 60,000 nuclear weapons the US had made by 1987.

By the 1950s, scientists understood much more about the effects of radiation.
Workers in white jumpsuits, black boots, and face masks use handheld equipment near a wooden structure
Emergency Radiation Team members from Hanford use equipment for measuring levels of radioactive contamination in 1958.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Some serious accidents and secret human experiments showed how deadly radiation sickness could be, according to the AHF. US officials suppressed information about how the bombs were causing severe illnesses and deaths in Japan, according to JSTOR.

In 1954, Life Magazine profiled Hanford employee Homer Moulthorp, who had created plastic suits to combat radiation sickness.

His friends referred to it as "Homer's Hideous Hallucination." Before that, the employees had to wear heavy clothing that had to be buried after being used once.

To learn more about radiation sickness, scientists conducted tests on rats, cats, dogs, cows, sheep, pigs, and alligators.
A scientists uses a piece of equipment on a sheep to measure radiation levels
A scientist at the Hanford Site conducting radiation experiments on a sheep in 1957.

AP Photo/Ed Johnson

The researchers were trying to determine radiation's effects on people. In 2007, 40,000 tons of dead animals and manure were uncovered from trenches in Hanford, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported. Most of the waste was manure, contaminated with radioactive strontium-90.

Decades of plutonium manufacturing left behind an enormous amount of nuclear waste.
Two workers in white jumpsuits and hard hates near barrels of yellow, dirt-covered low-level Class A commercial nuclear waste
Employees check barrels of low-level nuclear waste with a Geiger counter at the Hanford Site in 1988.

Roger Ressmeyer/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

Even producing a small batch of plutonium would result in a huge amount of contaminated waste.

In 1985, a newspaper story about a nearby community dubbed "death mile" detailed the high rates of cancer among farming families living near Hanford.
A gray-haired man holds a tool with a large clump of grass
Activist Tom Bailie in 1988.

Roger Ressmeyer/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

In a story for the Spokesman-Review, farmer Tom Bailie described the town of Ringold, Washington, about 11 miles southeast of the Hanford Site, as having unusually high rates of cancer.

The story's reporter, Karen Dorn Steele, later found the government had conducted a test in 1949 to learn more about how the radioisotope Iodine 131 moved through the air, per NPS. Thousands of Hanford Downwinders, as they called themselves, filed lawsuits against the government. All the lawsuits have since been either dropped or settled.

In 1989, the Tri-Party Agreement was signed to clean up the area.
A worker in a hard hat looks through an open door at a nuclear fuel storage room
A worker looks through the open door of a storage room for nuclear fuel in 1988.

Roger Ressmeyer/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

The Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Energy, and the Washington State Department of Ecology signed the agreement.

"It was at the end of the Cold War that the site's mission shifted from production of plutonium and that material to environmental cleanup," Ryan Miller, a communications manager for the Washington State Department of Ecology, told Business Insider.

By then Hanford was no longer making plutonium. Reactors started shutting down in the mid-1960s; the last one closed in 1987. It was exclusively a massive environmental hazard that needed to be cleaned up.

Despite the agreement, what would follow would be a slow, often halting, attempt to clean up Hanford, at a cost of $2 billion or more a year.
Workers in white jumpsuits stand in a steel structure
Workers remove fuel from the core of the Hanford test reactor in May 1972.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

There are a host of challenges when it comes to cleaning up Hanford, from contaminated buildings and groundwater to leaky storage tanks holding radioactive waste.

Officials don't even know where all the contaminated material is.

In the '40s and '50s, working with radioactive material was still new, so much of the nuclear waste was improperly disposed of.
A worker on top of a truck holding a large drum of nuclear waste
A worker at the Hanford Site removes a lid from a canister holding sealed containers of low-level radioactive waste in 1979.

AP Photo/Mason, File

"One of the biggest challenges, at least back in the '80s when cleanup started, was documentation," Miller said. The agencies worked to figure out the scope of the problem, but they were hampered by poor record-keeping. "There's a kind of shroud of secrecy over the Hanford Site, especially during World War II," he added.

When Hanford first produced nuclear waste, workers buried contaminated clothes and tools in the desert, without recording the locations, The Daily Beast reported in 2013.

Hanford had different processes for different wastes: Slightly contaminated liquids went into ponds, solid waste was buried, and some gases were released into the air.
Trucks and other heavy machinery in a large dirt pit
A landfill for discarding contaminated soil, building materials, and debris at Hanford in 2005.

Jeff T. Green/Getty Images

Across the reserve, there were nearly 1,700 waste sites.

During the production years, workers would dump barrels of waste and contaminated groundwater into unlined trenches, Miller said. The agencies have addressed over 1,350 sites so far, he added.

Solid waste can be anything from contaminated tools to clothing to broken equipment.
Workers in white jumpsuits work with shovels in front of a bulldozer
Employees work on a tank farm at the Hanford Site in 2013.

AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File

Liquid waste is usually contaminated water or sludge, which is described as having the same consistency as peanut butter.

Inspectors found 85 square miles of contaminated groundwater in the 1990s.
A large blue machine with circular tanks in a building with a rounded ceiling
A pumping system at the Hanford Site runs groundwater through charcoal filters to clean it.

Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

The contaminated groundwater had a footprint larger than Boise, Idaho. Hanford set up pump-and-treat facilities to treat the water and then re-inject it back into the ground, Miller said. So far, the facilities have treated over 32 billion gallons of groundwater.

In 2017, the EPA said contaminated groundwater was flowing freely into the Columbia River. The river's hundreds of thousands of gallons of water help dilute the uranium, tritium, and other substances that seep in, according to Washington's Department of Ecology.

Most concerning is the highly radioactive waste that was stored in 177 storage tanks, each holding between 55,000 and 1 million gallons.
A large industrial structure with cylindrical towers and smaller structures surrounding them
A double-shell tank farm containing six underground tanks at the Hanford Site in 2005.

Jeff T. Green/Getty Images

The first 149 tanks were built with a single layer of steel. In 1968, officials developed a new double-shelled model, storing waste in 28 of them.

Altogether, the tanks contain twice the radioactivity released by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Russia, The Atlantic reported. By 1989, 68 of the 149 tanks had leaked 900,000 contaminated gallons into the ground.

"This waste poses, arguably, the largest kind of cleanup effort being done at the Hanford site, and one of the biggest risks," Miller said.

In 2010, Robert Alvarez, a former Energy Department official, said the amount of plutonium buried at Hanford could fuel 1,800 bombs, as reported by The New York Times.

In 1998, Hanford managers said they had been wrong to describe the tank leaks as insignificant for decades.
Industrial buildings, pipes, and machinery with hills in the background
A technician works in a containment area at Hanford 1997.

Brownie Harris/Corbis via Getty Images

It was only after a million gallons of waste had leaked into the ground that the DOE said more information was necessary, The New York Times reported in 2010. A year earlier, a contractor fired an employee who voiced concerns about the issue "too vigorously."

"A lot of those tanks were built in the '40s, '50s, '60s," Miller said. "So all the tanks are well past their design life."

In 2013, new leaks were discovered in several underground tanks. While management already knew that one tank was leaking at a rate of up to 300 gallons of waste every year, the discovery that five more were also leaking was especially concerning, CBS News reported.

In 2002, work began on a tank waste treatment plant, which is key to cleaning up Hanford.
Many steel drums stacked on top of each other in rows near a dirt mound with electrical wires behind
Low-level radioactive waste in containers are put into trenches that are then covered in dirt.

MICHAEL MACOR/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

The treatment plant will turn the waste from the deteriorating tanks into glass, which can then be stored more safely for several thousand years. This process, known as vitrification, is expected to begin with some of the low-activity, less radioactive waste next year.

Once the vitrified waste is stored in steel containers, workers will dispose of the low-activity glass at a Hanford landfill, which has been engineered with barriers, Miller said.

There's currently no facility in the US capable of storing high-level waste long-term, so that too will stay at Hanford for the time being.

Radioactive cesium and strontium were removed from the underground tanks, put into capsules, and stored underwater.
Canisters are neatly lined up on a  metal shelving system
Cesium and strontium capsules are stored in water at the Hanford Site.

US Department of Energy via AP Photo

Strontium-90 is also called a "bone seeker" because it acts similarly to calcium — accumulating in bones — while increasing the risk of cancer.

Concerned about earthquakes, the DOE decided the capsules needed to be moved. In the next year or so, the agencies will start transferring them to dry storage, Miller said.

Seven of the nine nuclear reactors are in interim safe storage.
A aerial view of many buildings that are part of a nuclear reactor next to a river
The N Reactor on the Columbia River at the Hanford Site in 1988.

Roger Ressmeyer/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

The nine reactors presented a challenge, Miller said, because they had big footprints. Workers removed hazardous materials and demolished supporting infrastructure and facilities.

In addition to the reactors, nearly 2,000 contaminated buildings covered the Hanford Site. The agencies have demolished almost half of them.

The reactors were sealed off, also known as being "fully cocooned."
A metal building with a slanted roof on one side and no windows or doors
A protective enclosure or cocoon covers the former K East Reactor building at the Hanford Site.

US Department of Energy

Crews demolished parts of the reactors, then encased the rest in giant steel structures. They will remain like this for at least 75 years, until radiation falls to a safe level and workers can dismantle the structures, though the method for full disposal isn't yet known.

One reactor still needs to be cocooned — scheduled to be completed by 2032 — while another will remain standing.

Reactor B is now a national monument that visitors can tour.
A green control panel with many switches and gages and a wooden chair in front
The control panel for the Hanford nuclear site's B Reactor in 2008.

AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File

The B Reactor was the world's first full-scale plutonium production reactor. Instead of being cocooned, it was turned into a National Historic Landmark in 2008. Some areas are still radioactive but visitors don't have access to them, according to the tour's safety sheet.

As many as 15,000 people visit the National Historical Park at Hanford each year. Most visitors to the site don't need to wear dosimeters or other special equipment.

The former buffer zone is now called Hanford Reach and is home to dozens of species.
Green grass, a river, and hills that look pink as the sun sets
Rattlesnake Mountain near the Hanford Site.

Greg Vaughn/VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Instead of farmers and ranchers developing the land, it's been left untouched for over 75 years, and wildlife has boomed. In 2000, President Bill Clinton made the 195,000-acre area a National Monument.

Today, the Reach is an important habitat for the region's vegetation and wildlife.
A herd of elk in front of a tall industrial building with a cylindrical tower
A herd of mule deer near one of Hanford's reactors in 2001.

Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

There are herds of elk and mule deer. Chinook salmon breed in stretches of the river in autumn, and it's home to an abundance of birds, including burrowing owls, Swainson hawks, and sagebrush sparrows.

Not all animals are thriving, though. The agencies have found issues with radioactive wasp nests, fruit flies, and rabbits.

When radioactive rabbit droppings were found in the area, it was protocol to set traps to kill contaminated rabbits, The Seattle Times reported.

Recently, some populations, like the ground squirrels and burrowing owls, have been declining and specialists aren't sure why.

Adventure companies bring kayaking tourists by Hanford Reach on the Columbia River.
Kayakers on a river with industrial buildings on the shore
Kayakers on a tour organized by the Columbia River Exhibition of History, Science, and Technology near the B Reactor at Hanford in 2008.

Spencer Weiner/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

As for radiation on and in the river, health officials said fish tested for radiation posed no health risk.

Earlier this year, Hanford workers pumped out contaminated water nearby that threatened to leak into the river, according to the Tri-City Herald.

Though Hanford stopped producing plutonium decades ago, the surrounding areas continued to feel the effects of the nuclear waste.
A woman holds her arm above her head looking at a man in a circular device used for pulmonary function tests
A former Hanford worker who has COPD during a pulmonary function test in 2017.

Helen H. Richardson/Denver Post via Getty Images

In 2000, wildfires threatened the complex, and Washington's Department of Health reported a rise in plutonium levels in the area, thought to be spread by dust and ash.

Some Hanford workers say they have lung-related illnesses, like COPD or cancer, that they attributed to the time at the site, OPB News reported in 2016.

Radioactive tumbleweeds rolling across the site also caused issues in the early 2000s.
Aerial view of Hanford Reach National Monument and of its native sagebrush-sand habitat.
Tumbleweed is an invasive weed that pushes out native plants near the Hanford Site.

GeoStock/Getty Images

When affected Russian thistle decayed and broke from its roots, the radioactive tumbleweeds could roll for up to 4 miles and spread a year's dose of radiation, The Washington Post reported.

In 2017, a tunnel storing radioactive waste collapsed.
A large hole in a dirt mound in an open dirt-covered area with some trucks and equipment nearby
A 20-foot wide hole over a rail tunnel at the Hanford Site in 2017.

Department of Energy/Handout via REUTERS

Hanford radiation experts said if it had been a windy day, radioactive particles could've blown around and made the situation much worse.

The DOE's own experts had warned the tunnels might collapse for decades, KING 5 reported in 2017. The EPA said more tunnels would collapse as the equipment deteriorated.

Hanford's 11,000 workers are still at risk.
Workers in white jumpsuits and gas masks inspect an object with Geiger counters
Workers at the tank farms on the Hanford Site measure for radiation and the presence of toxic vapors in 2004.

AP Photo/Jackie Johnston, File

In 2016, 61 employees were exposed to vapors from leaking tanks, two years after a report found a "causal link" between the vapors and lung and brain damage.

A 2021 Washington State Department of Commerce survey of over 1,000 current and former Hanford workers found that 57% had been exposed to hazardous materials.

This June, firefighters responded to a fire not far from the Hanford site.
A satellite image showing the Hanford Site and the Two Fork Fire that was blazing nearby
A satellite image from June 2024 shows the heat shows a fire near the Hanford nuclear site.

Reuters

The area is prone to wildfires and possible earthquakes.

The last big earthquake in the area was in 1936, but another sizable one could release radiation. That's what happened with the nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan, in 2011.

In the next five years, Hanford could start turning low-activity waste into glass.
A goldish cylinder with a green substance inside
A container of glass poured at Hanford's Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant.

US Department of Energy

Miller said Hanford is on track to start the vitrification process in the summer of 2025. Workers have already started making test glass.

But not all the waste will undergo vitrification. Instead, some will go through a different process, grouting, which makes the waste more like cement than glass. It's less expensive and quicker, but the method hasn't been as thoroughly tested as vitrification, Cascade PBS reported.

The grouting plans are part of a new Holistic Agreement between the EPA, DOE, and Washington State Department of Ecology.
A worker in blue coveralls, a hard hat, and safety glasses next to silver drums in an industrial building
Drums containing waste at the Hanford Site in 2005.

Jeff T. Green/Getty Images

While the agencies say the deadlines haven't changed, the agreement does update the Tri-Party Agreement.

Some stakeholders, like local tribes and environmental groups, said the agencies didn't include them in the meetings about the new plans, OPB News reported.

The Department of Energy wanted to dispose of all of the underground waste by 2052, but that's unlikely.
A road surrounded by grass and a bright yellow sign reading Caution: Radiolcically controlled area entry requirements: general employee radiological training
A sign warning about a radiologically controlled area at the Hanford Site in 2005.

Jeff T. Green/Getty Images

New estimates are closer to 2069 or later. In 2002, the Government Accountability Office estimated the price to clean up Hanford at between $300 billion and $640 billion. The office put the timeline at a vague "decades."

It's unclear how the next Trump administration will handle Hanford.
Donald Trump
Donald Trump attempted to cut funding for Hanford's cleanup during his first term.

Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

In March, President Joe Biden gave Hanford its highest cleanup budget yet, $3.05 billion. Things could change under the next administration.

During his first term, President Donald Trump proposed cutting Hanford's budget and floated the idea of reclassifying high-level waste as less dangerous to lower costs, per The Los Angeles Times.

Miller said less funding could ultimately make cleaning up Hanford longer and more expensive.

"Every year that Hanford cleanup is underfunded, that can actually push the ultimate lifespan of the project out further," he said. "It could actually balloon the cost by tens of billions of dollars if it's not funded appropriately now."

Environmentalists won't stop fighting for the cleanup, but they know the waste will long outlive them.
The Hanford nuclear reactor with a tall cylindrical structure behind a chain link fence
The B Reactor at the Hanford Site in 2005.

Jeff T. Green/Getty Images

Tom Carpenter, executive director of the watchdog Hanford Challenge, told The Atlantic in 2018 that the majority of Hanford's waste was going nowhere. "Hanford is going to be a national sacrifice zone for hundreds of years," he said.

Sources used for this story include the Hanford Site, the Washington State Department of Ecology, the US Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Parks Service, the Atomic Heritage Foundation, the Government Accountability Office, and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

This story was originally published on September 23, 2019, and updated on December 17, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

RFK Jr.'s key advisor petitioned to revoke approval of the polio vaccine. Photos show the US's last outbreak.

  • A lawyer advising Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wants the FDA to revoke approval of the polio vaccine.
  • Before vaccines were available in 1955, polio caused 15,000 cases of paralysis in the US each year. 
  • The US eliminated the disease in 1979, but unvaccinated travelers can still carry polio in.
Many iron lungs with medical professionals around and people inside
Iron lungs line up at the Ranchos Los Amigos Respiratory Center circa 1950.

Bettmann via Getty Images

Some health experts are concerned that polio could make a comeback in the US if the government revokes approval for the vaccine.

That's what lawyer Aaron Siri petitioned to the FDA in 2022. His petition is still under review but could get renewed attention if Donald Trump's nominee for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, is confirmed.

Kennedy has said he doesn't plan to revoke any vaccines as health secretary. However, he has a close relationship with Siri who represented Kennedy during his presidential campaign. 

Moreover, Siri's polio petition was on behalf of the nonprofit Informed Consent Action Network, whose founder is close to Kennedy, The New York Times reported.

Polio vaccines helped eliminate the disease from the US in 1979. 

Before then, in the 1950s specifically, cases of poliovirus ran rampant in the US. Hospitals overflowed with disabled or severely ill patients, according to the National Library of Medicine.

During the outbreak's peak in 1952, polio infections caused 20,000 cases of paralysis. Families isolated in fear because of how easily it spreads among kids

Doctors warn that pausing polio vaccinations could help the disease regain its foothold.

A virus that affects nerves in the spinal cord or brain stem causes polio.
A girl holds an abacus in a hospital bed
A young girl using an abacus in a bed at the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York, circa 1950.

Douglas Grundy/Three Lions/Getty Images

Polio mainly affects children under the age of five. Most people only have mild symptoms, but one in 200 cases causes irreversible paralysis. Between 5% and 10% of paralyzed patients die when muscles used for breathing can no longer move, according to the World Health Organization

The US had several polio epidemics in the 20th century, including in 1916 and 1937.
A doctor examines a child with a leg cast on a hospital bed
A doctor removes special casts to examine the a polio patient's legs in 1916.

Bettmann via Getty Images

Polio was first identified in 1909, though it had been around for centuries, and the US had a serious outbreak in 1916, which started in New York. 

At the time, doctors understood very little about the disease, including how to treat and prevent it. 

An estimated 6,000 people died and 21,000 had resulting paralysis from the 1916 outbreak.

There were a series of polio outbreaks in the 1940s and 1950s.
Two-month-old Martha Ann Murray is watched over by a nurse in an iron lung.
Two-month-old Martha Ann Murray is watched over by a nurse in an iron lung in 1952.

AP Photo

The number of polio cases rose from eight per 100,000 in 1944 to 37 per 100,000 in 1952, according to Yale Medical Magazine. During that period, about 60,000 children were contracting the disease each year.

There was an increase in people over the age of 10 getting the virus, too. 

Treatments for polio included hot wool and physical therapy.
Polio patient uses his right foot to draw a hospital floor plan.
Larry Becker draws a hospital floor plan using his right foot in 1955.

AP Photo

Early on, some doctors would put patients in full-body casts, which could make paralysis permanent. 

Roosevelt sought relief by taking dips in Georgia's warm springs. 

During a 1940s polio outbreak, the Hickory Emergency Infantile Paralysis Hospital in North Carolina tried treating patients with boiled wool "hot packs" for the skin and physical therapy.

Patients with severe cases lived their entire lives in iron lungs.
Nurse oversees boy in an iron lung.
A nurse oversees a boy with polio in an iron lung in 1955.

Kirn Vintage Stock/Corbis/Getty Images

Bellows inside the large metal box provided suction to help patients breathe when they could no longer do so on their own. The device was first used to save the life of an eight-year-old patient in 1928. 

Some famous people contracted polio as children, including Mia Farrow and Alan Alda.
John Farrow carries his daugther Mia wrapped in a plaid blanket down the steps from the hospital
John Farrow carries daughter Mia out of the hospital in 1954.

Bettmann via Getty Images

Farrow, the daughter of director John Farrow and the actress and Tarzan-girl Maureen O'Sullivan, became ill during an LA polio outbreak in the summer of 1954.

"What I saw will never leave me — in the hospitals and in the public wards for contagious diseases," Farrow said in 2000. 

Franklin D. Roosevelt started the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, now known as the March of Dimes, to find a cure for polio.
5 children with Basil O'Connor, one girl on crutches and another with braces
Children with polio meet Basil O'Connor, president of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.

Matty Zimmerman/AP Photo

Roosevelt founded the organization with his former law partner, Basil O'Connor, to help fund research into a polio vaccine. 

Roosevelt knew the effects of polio first-hand. He was diagnosed with polio in 1921 at the age of 39 and used a wheelchair, mainly in private, while he was president. 

 

Celebrities such as Grace Kelly and Joan Crawford helped promote campaigns for a vaccine.
Grace Kelly bends to talk to a girl with leg braces
Grace Kelly with Mary Koloski at a March of Dimes event in 1955.

API/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

These campaigns helped raise half of all donations to health charities in the US, PBS reported.

Jonas Salk was one of the researchers working on a polio vaccine.
Dr. Jonas Salk looking at test tubes in his lab.
Developer of the polio vaccine, Dr. Jonas Salk in a laboratory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1954.

AP Photo

At the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Salk began developing a vaccine in the early 1950s.

He grew polioviruses on cultures of monkeys' kidney cells and then used formaldehyde to kill the virus.

When he injected the dead virus into live monkeys, it protected them from the disease, according to the Science History Institute.

After his vaccine proved successful on monkeys, Salk began testing children.
Jonas Salk gives a vaccine to a crying child held by a nurse as two others look on
Jonas Salk gives a vaccine to a child in the 1950s.

Mondadori via Getty Images

Salk first injected children who had already had polio. He noted that their antibody levels rose after vaccination, a promising sign that it helped the body fight the infection. 

Roosevelt's foundation also backed another potential prevention method, gamma globulin.
A line of children and parents wait to be immunized with gamma globulin
A line of children and parents wait to be immunized with gamma globulin in 1953.

Paul E. Thomson/AP Photo

In the early 1950s, over 220,000 children were injected with gamma globulin, proteins in blood plasma that are rich in antibodies. The hope was that the serum would boost kids' immune systems and keep them from contracting polio. 

After looking at the data, though, a committee of epidemiologists and other experts concluded that gamma globulin wasn't effective. 

The gamma globulin trials helped pave the way for similar trials with Salk's vaccine.
Jonas Salk gives a shot of the polio vaccine to a girl in a plaid shirt
Salk gives a shot of the polio vaccine to a girl during test trials in 1954.

Bettmann/Getty Images

In 1954, the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis sponsored a trial to test Salk's vaccine. 

Nearly 2 million children between 6 and 9 years old participated. They were called "Polio Pioneers."

Participants were divided into three groups: the first group received the vaccine, the second received a placebo, and the third received neither the vaccine nor a placebo. 

The following year, in 1955, the vaccine was declared 90% effective against Types 2 and 3 poliovirus. It was 60% to 70% effective against Type 1.

 

 

Nearly 2 million children participated in the trials, and the vaccine was found to be 90% effective.
Dr. Jonas Salk on a plane's stairway with his family
Jonas Salk arrives in Pittsburgh with his family in 1955.

AP Photo

At a press conference, Thomas Francis Jr., director of the Poliomyelitis Vaccine Evaluation Center at the University of Michigan, called the vaccine "Safe, effective, and potent."

It was headline news. "The story has blanketed the front pages of all the papers I have seen along a 1,600-mile route from New York to Saint Louis, to Memphis and Dallas," Alistair Cooke reported for The Guardian at the time. 

Though he had some detractors, Salk won many Americans' trust.
A hand holding a vial of Polio vaccine
Joans Salk's polio vaccine in 1955.

AP Photo

It took mere hours for Salk's vaccine to be licensed for use after the announcement of its efficacy.

Vaccine distribution began almost immediately.
Boxes labeled Polio vaccine wyeth being loaded onto a plane
Polio vaccines are shipped to Europe in 1955.

Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

NFIP had already funded facilities that could start producing the vaccine right away. The US sent some vaccines to Europe, and some countries started up their own productions. 

Children would receive a series of shots to complete the vaccination process.
A hand injecting a polio vaccine into a wide-eyed girl
Eight-year-old Ann Hill gets the polio vaccine days after Salk's announcement that it's effective.

AP Photo

Children needed three shots, each costing between $3 and $5 (around $35-$59 today), according to The Conversation.

Shortly after the vaccine program began, a tragic incident caused several deaths.
Men holding boxes in a warehouse
Vaccines are prepared to be distributed around the West Coast from Cutter Laboratories in April 1955.

Ernest K. Bennett/AP Photo

One of the facilities manufacturing the vaccine, Cutter Laboratories, had kept the live polio virus in hundreds of thousands of doses.

In April 1955, over 400,000 children received the improperly prepared vaccines. The mistake led to 260 cases of polio-based paralysis and several deaths, according to the National Institutes of Health

Despite the incident at Cutter Laboratories, hundreds of thousands of children were vaccinated in 1955.
A boy getting the polio vaccine
Son of the US Surgeon General Leonard McCormick "Bobo" Scheele receives the polio vaccine in May 1955.

Byron Rollins/AP Photo

The incident at Cutter Laboratories panicked many parents and the vaccine was pulled from the market on April 27, 1955. 

However, after a massive effort to recheck all the vaccines confirmed they were safe to use, immunization resumed on May 15, 1955. Worldwide, hundreds of thousands of children received the vaccine. 

Elvis got the vaccine backstage during the "Ed Sullivan Show."
elvis presley receives polio vaccine from a man while a woman stands nearby helping
Oct. 28, 1956: Elvis Presley receives the polio vaccine in New York City.

AP Photo

If people were hesitant to have their children vaccinated, Elvis may have helped persuade them. After he got the jab in the fall of 1956, many followed suit. 

Within six months, 80% of America's youngest generation were vaccinated, Scientific American reported in 2021. 

Other celebrities, including Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald, also promoted the vaccine to help inform people of all races and genders.
old photo shows nurse administering polio vaccine to line of black and white children
A nurse prepares elementaary school children for a polio vaccine shot.

Bettmann / Contributor / Getty Images

Roosevelt's foundation was heavily involved in promoting the vaccine and recruited celebrities like Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald for their campaigns.

"There was a very early recognition that you couldn't just have white people talking about the vaccine,"  Stacey D. Stewart, former president and CEO of the March of Dimes, told NPR in 2021. 

The polio vaccine quickly began protecting people against the virus.
man in an iron lung with two women looking at him
Edward Scheffler with his mother after traveling by railroad in 1957.

AP Photo

Between 1953 and 1957, cases in the US dropped from 35,000 to 5,300 a year, according to the BBC.  

Meanwhile, Salk's rival, Albert Sabin, was still working on his own polio vaccine.
5-year-old with polio is visited by two doctors.
Mark Stacey is visited by Albert Sabin (right) and Dr. Walter Langsam (left) in 1959.

Gene Smith/AP Photo

Sabin disagreed with Salk's method of using a vaccine with a killed virus. Instead, he preferred a live, yet weakened form that could be taken by mouth instead of injected. 

Once Sabin showed his version was effective using a trial in the Soviet Union, it was approved for use in the US in 1961.  

Because Sabin's vaccine was inexpensive and easy to administer many countries began using the oral method. In fact, the song "A Spoonful of Sugar (Helps the Medicine Go Down)" in the 1964 film "Mary Poppins" was inspired by Sabin's polio vaccine.

A combination of the two vaccines helped nearly eradicate polio worldwide.
People in a emergency polio ward in iron lungs
An emergency polio ward in Boston, Massachusetts in 1955.

AP Photo

During the 2010s, the world eradicated polio Types 2 and 3. Only Type 1 remains. The World Health Organization hopes to wipe out the final strain by 2026, but that goal is impossible without polio vaccines

This story was originally published on August 13, 2022, and updated on December 16, 2024. Jake Johnson contributed to a previous version of this post. 





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Céline Dion's eldest son is a musician, too. Here's what you need to know about her 3 kids.

Celine Dion stands on the red carpet with her son Rene-Charles Angelil for a screening of the documentary film "I Am: Celine Dion"
Céline Dion and her son René-Charles Angélil at a screening of "I Am: Céline Dion" in June 2024.

ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images

  • Céline Dion and her late husband, René Angélil, had three children together.
  • Dion's eldest son, René-Charles Angélil, is 23 and pursuing a career in music.
  • The singer also has 14-year-old fraternal twin boys named Nelson and Eddy.

Céline Dion is a five-time Grammy winner, a global icon, and a proud mother.

The "My Heart Will Go On" singer has three children with her late husband, René Angélil, who died of throat cancer in 2016.

"What makes me most proud is to be a mother," Dion told Extra in 2017. "To be honest, they're remarkable. They are helping me. I am helping them — it's mutual," she added.

Here's everything you need to know about Dion's three kids.

René-Charles Angélil, 23, is the eldest child.

taylor swift at the grammys with her arms around celine dion and rene-charles angelil, all smiling and in formal wear
Celine Dion, Taylor Swift, and Rene-Charles Angelil at the 66th Grammy Awards.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Dion gave birth to René-Charles in Florida on January 25, 2001, and the couple named him after his father. As the famous singer's first child, he was automatically in the spotlight.

During an appearance on James Corden's "Carpool Karaoke" segment in 2019, Dion recalled the media frenzy when she gave birth.

She saw her doctor on TV announcing the birth of her child right after delivery. "And I'm saying to myself, 'My baby is on television, and I didn't even hold him yet,'" she said.

At his father's funeral in 2016, 14-year-old René-Charles gave a touching speech. A few months later, the teen surprised Dion by presenting her with the Icon Award at the 2016 Billboard Music Awards.

In 2018, René-Charles started releasing rap and R&B music under the stage name Big Tip.

When René-Charles released his first EP in 2021 under the name RC Angélil, his mother posted on X, then Twitter, "I'm so proud of my son. My love for him is so strong, and it touches me deeply that one of his passions is also one of mine."

At the 2024 Grammys in February, René-Charles escorted Dion onstage as she presented the award for album of the year to Taylor Swift. Mother and son also posed with Swift backstage.

Dion's fraternal twins, Nelson and Eddy, are 14 years old.

Céline Dion and two of her sons at a hockey game in 2024
Céline Dion and her sons attend the Boston Bruins and New York Rangers hockey game in March 2024.

Steve Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images

In a 2010 episode of "The Oprah Winfrey Show," Dion talked about the difficulties she had becoming pregnant again. She underwent several rounds of in vitro fertilization and had a miscarriage.

"We tried four times to have a child," she said. "We're still trying. We're on the fifth try. And I tell you, if five is my lucky number, this fifth try has got to come in."

Dion gave birth to Nelson and Eddy via C-section in Florida on October 23, 2010. Their names were inspired by former South African President Nelson Mandela and the French songwriter Eddy Marnay, who worked on several of Dion's albums.

"They have very different personalities, but both of them love to wake up first thing in the morning and go to their closet and decide what they will wear," she said of her twins in a 2013 interview with the Daily Mail.

All three of Dion's kids continue to be supportive of their mom on and off the stage.

Back in 2019, they joined her onstage during the final night of her Las Vegas residency. In 2023, the family attended a hockey game together. The outing marked Dion's first major public appearance since sharing in 2022 that she was diagnosed with stiff person syndrome.

Recently, she's had to explain to her sons how to deal with an emergency related to her illness because she may not be able to speak. "As a mother, first of all, talk to your kids. Let them know that you will not die," she told TODAY's Hoda Kotb in June.

This story was originally published on February 5, 2024, and updated on December 12, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

15 slang words Gen Zers are using in 2024 and what they really mean

A group of young people sitting on a staircase and looking at a phone.

FG Trade/Getty Images

  • Just like the generations before them, Gen Z has an extensive list of slang words.
  • "Bussin'," "ick," and "mid" are popular among Gen Zers.
  • Social media helps slang spread rapidly, but proper credit is often lost along the way.

Just like the generations before them, Gen Z uses an extensive list of slang words like "bussin'," "ick," and "mid."

However, unlike past generations, Gen Z has social media to help slang spread rapidly.

"The emergence of social media has created a situation where the potential for slang virality has increased," John Baugh, a linguist at Washington University in St. Louis, told Business Insider last year.

Anyone with an account can share and adopt new terms with just a couple of clicks. While this can be an exciting opportunity for people to connect and bond over language, it can also lead to appropriation.

Black and LGBTQ+ communities created many of the slang words attributed to Gen Z — anyone born between 1997 and 2012.

However, these marginalized communities often don't receive credit for their contributions.

When their slang enters larger circles via social media, those who don't know its origins can misuse the language, which can be offputting or even offensive.

Brands and publications marketing to Gen Z should be especially careful with slang as this generation values authenticity more than older generations.

And much like fashion, slang is ever-evolving. All these words and phrases will inevitably be axed and deemed "uncool."

At least for now, though, here are 15 slang terms Gen Z is using in 2024 and what they mean.

If you're told to do something "for the plot," it means to do it for the experience.
Crowd on day two of Lollapalooza Brazil 2024.
Crowd at Lollapalooza Brazil 2024.

Mauricio Santana/Contributor/Getty Images

Saying "for the plot" is a fun way for Gen Z to encourage each other to do the wild, fun things that make storytelling fun when you're older.

Influencer Serena Kerrigan has been credited with popularizing the phrase, saying, "this is your reminder that if something works out, great, and if it doesn't, it's for the plot." In other words, your highs and lows are all shaping and contributing to your life story.

Whether you swipe right on Tinder or go out spontaneously on a Tuesday night, it's all about the plot.

Still popular from 2023, someone with "rizz" has charisma.
Gerry poses for a photo while the women of "The Golden Bachelor" stand in rows next to and behind him.
Gerry Turner and the women of "The Golden Bachelor."

ABC/Craig Sjodin

It's true; Gen Z has an affinity for abbreviations.

A person with "rizz" is confident, charming, and generally successful in romantic endeavors. The phrase officially reached the boomer generation when the Golden Bachelor announced he had rizz.

An "ick" is a turnoff.
Olivia Attwood Dack attends the TV Choice Awards 2024.
Olivia Attwood Dack helped coin the term "ick" during her appearance on season three of "Love Island."

Hoda Davaine/Dave Benett/Contributor/Getty Images

Ah, the ick. "Love Island" contestant Olivia Attwood (now Olivia Attwood Dack) helped popularize the phrase during season three, but "the ick" remains a staple in Gen Z's vocabulary.

If someone gives you "the ick," it means they've turned you off, either through their actions or words.

"Icks" can arise from small offenses, such as using the "wrong" emoji in conversation, or from larger issues, such as being rude to a barista.

It's all about personal preference.

If someone lives "rent-free" in your mind, you think about them a lot.
German photographer Boris Eldagsen shows a printed photograph of his work "Pseudomnesia: The Electrician" which he had created with the usage of artificial intelligence.
German photographer Boris Eldagsen created this image with artificial intelligence and won the "Sony World Photography Award" in 2023.

FABRIZIO BENSCH via Reuters

When someone or something constantly occupies your thoughts, they've taken up residence in your head without paying you a dime. In 1999, one reader attributed the phrase living "rent-free" to advice columnist Ann Landers.

Though often associated with specific people like a crush or celebrity, the phrase can also apply to positive and negative events, like an epic concert or a ridiculous AI image.

"Mother" is a popular term of endearment for female celebrities that originated in LGBTQ+ communities.
Rihanna performs during the Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show in 2023.
Rihanna performs during the Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show in 2023.

Kevin Mazur/Contributor/Getty Images for Roc Nation

"Mother" is a woman deserving of your respect who's had a profound influence on your life.

For some, that's Diana Ross. For others, it's Rihanna. Reneé Rapp, Mariah Carey, and Lana Del Rey have all been called mother, too.

Last year, The New York Times reported that people in the Black and Latino LGBTQ+ ballroom scene coined the term, which stemmed from the "queer subculture in which members are organized into so-called houses often led by a 'mother.'"

Michaela Jaé Rodriguez, who played a house mother in the groundbreaking series "Pose," told The New York Times that "anyone should be able to use a term that is trending" but that it's important to know and acknowledge where it came from.

If a person "ate," they executed something flawlessly.
Zendaya attends the 2024 Met Gala.
Zendaya attends the 2024 Met Gala.

John Shearer/Getty Images

Often associated with fashion and beauty, saying someone "ate" is a way of expressing they look amazing and did a great job.

Look at almost any picture of Zendaya on the red carpet, and it'd be correct to say, "She ate."

"Left no crumbs" is a continuation of "ate" that's used as additional emphasis.
Mona Patel on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet.
Mona Patel on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

If you hear "she ate," you may often hear "and left no crumbs" immediately after.

The additional phrase helps emphasize how perfect the person's execution was, though it can be used on its own, too.

For example, "Entrepreneur Mona Patel ate and left no crumbs at the 2024 Met Gala." That means she executed the theme perfectly — everything from her dress to her glam to the presentation on the red carpet was flawless.

"Bussin'" or "buss" means it's very good.
Items from Taco Bell.
Items from Taco Bell.

Rachel Murray/Stringer/Getty Images for Taco Bell

Often used to describe food, "bussin'" originated in the Black community and means extremely good or delicious, per Merriam-Webster.

So if your kid says tonight's dinner was "bussin'," just know you did a great job.

Something is "mid" if it falls short of expectations.
Kaley Cuoco attends the Critics Choice Awards in January 2024.
Kaley Cuoco attends the Critics Choice Awards in January.

Jeff Kravitz/Contributor/FilmMagic

Whether it's a dress on the red carpet, a new TV show, or a pasta recipe, something that's "mid" is mediocre.

BI reported that Kaley Cuoco's 2024 Critics Choice Awards gown missed the mark, so it could also be described as mid.

Another way to say focus is "lock in."
People studying at a library.
People studying at a library.

Dilara Irem Sancar/Anadolu via Getty Images

You can "lock in" on an assignment, cleaning your apartment, or even a video game.

"Let him cook" means don't stop him from doing his thing.
NC State forward DJ Burns Jr. played in the Elite 8 round of the 2024 March Madness Tournament.
The NC State forward DJ Burns Jr. played in the Elite Eight round of the 2024 March Madness tournament.

Lance King/Contributor/Getty Images

While NC State ultimately lost to Purdue in the Final Four, DJ Burns, Jr. was a standout in the 2024 March Madness tournament.

His coaches clearly saw how well he was performing and decided to "let him cook," giving him more playing time in their five tournament games, per ESPN.

Why call yourself delusional when you can say "delulu"?
A BookTok table at a Barnes and Noble in Scottsdale, Arizona.
A BookTok table at a Barnes and Noble in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Tali Arbel/Associated Press

As we've already established, Gen Z loves abbreviations.

"Delulu" simply means delusional, but in a way that's wacky instead of worrisome, according to The New York Times.

If you're hoping to elope with the lead in your favorite romance novel, you might be a bit delulu.

"Sus" is short for suspicious.
Among Us screenshot 5
In "Among Us," players discuss who they suspect of being an "Imposter" before ejecting them.

William Antonelli/Insider

It sounds a little sus, but this term dates back to the 1920s, per Merriam-Webster. The term originates from suss, as in, suss out whether someone is trustworthy or not.

Recently, the word reemerged thanks to the online game "Among Us," in which players try to determine who is an imposter working to sabotage their progress.

Cringe-worthy behavior may cost you "aura points."
Three portraits of blurry faces surrounded by colors
"Homage to Marcel Duchamps: Aura" by artist Susan Hiller.

JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP via Getty Images

A kind of cosmic, karma-esque rating system of cool, aura points are won and lost through a variety of impressive and embarrassing deeds. Talked to your crush with spinach in your teeth? Your aura points just took a hit.

"It's tongue-in-cheek, and it also seems to be a sort of weird contemporary honor code," philosopher Julian Baggini told The Guardian.

"No cap" means you're telling the truth.
A person holds a white kitten on an open book
Cats are smart but not necessarily book-smart.

Ali Atmaca/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

The phrase "no cap" has been around for decades and has roots in Black communities.

People often use it for emphasis, similarly to "for real." For example, "My cat is smarter than Einstein, no cap."

"No cap" is basically the opposite of "cap," which is short for "capping."

"Cap or capping has referenced bragging, exaggerating, or lying since the early 1900s," Kelly Elizabeth Wright, a language professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told TODAY.com.

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The 15 best places to live in the US, where homes are cheaper and there are lots of jobs to choose from

An aerial view of a bridge in Austin, Texas, filled with cars
Austin made the list of one of the best places to live in 2024.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images

  • US News & World Report created a list of the best places to live in the US in 2024.
  • Factors such as housing affordability, job opportunities, and quality of life determined the list.
  • Naples, Florida, tops 2024's list, followed by Boise, Idaho, and Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Deciding where to live isn't always easy.

Some people move multiple times in a decade, searching for new experiences or better opportunities. Others end up regretting relocating to their new homes.

While everyone's circumstances are unique, data can help narrow down the choices.

Every year, US News & World Report ranks 150 big cities based on factors including quality of life, schools, crime rates, employment opportunities, and housing affordability to find the best places to live in the United States.

For 2024's list, the South and the Midwest have the most cities ranked in the top 15.

Booming Boise, Idaho; outdoorsy Colorado Springs, Colorado; and the bustling banking hub of Charlotte, North Carolina, all consistently make the list of the best places to live. Newcomers include Austin, a growing tech hub, and two scenic South Carolina locales: Greenville and Charleston.

In addition to weighing job opportunities and housing costs, US News & World Report emphasizes each area's overall standard of living.

Here are the 15 best places to live in the US, according to US News & World Report. Residents find plenty to like about these cities, including relatively affordable homes, plenty of jobs, and lots of ways to spend their free time.

15. Lexington, Kentucky
An aerial view of Lexington.
Lexington, Kentucky.

Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 320,154

Median home price: $331,000

Median monthly rent: $1,600

Median household income: $66,392

Climate Vulnerability Index: 58th percentile (average vulnerability). This index shows areas of the US most likely to face challenges from climate change.

Known for: Home to over 450 horse farms, Lexington is known as the horse capital of the world. While it doesn't have the Kentucky Derby, Keeneland Race Track holds its own horse races twice a year.

14. Madison, Wisconsin
People walking on a street in Madison.
Madison, Wisconsin.

Walter Bibikow/Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 280,305

Median home price: $415,000

Median monthly rent: $1,700

Median household income: $70,484

Climate Vulnerability Index: 6th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: Wisconsin's capital is also the state's second-largest city. Madison is a college town, offering plenty of chances to see concerts and sporting events.

13. Charleston, South Carolina
A street in Charleston.
Charleston, South Carolina.

f11photo/Shutterstock

Population of the metro area: 155,369

Median home price: $617,500

Median monthly rent: $2,800

Median household income: $89,083

Climate Vulnerability Index: 55th percentile (average vulnerability)

Known for: With its cobblestone streets and 18th- and 19th-century buildings, Charleston is a dream for historic-architecture buffs. Plus, miles of beachy coastline are just a short trip from downtown.

12. Green Bay, Wisconsin
Buildings on the waterfront in Green Bay.
Green Bay, Wisconsin.

DenisTangneyJr/Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 105,744

Median home price: $318,000

Median monthly rent: $999

Median household income: $66,950

Climate Vulnerability Index: 15th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: Wisconsin's oldest city is home to the Green Bay Packers, a storied NFL team. Nature lovers can make the most of Green Bay's 25-mile Fox River State Trail, even in the winter.

11. Sarasota, Florida
Sarasota, Florida
Sarasota, Florida.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

Population of the metro area: 57,602

Median home price: $488,500

Median monthly rent: $2,800

Median household income: $68,870

Climate Vulnerability Index: 24th percentile (lower vulnerability)

Known for: Sarasota earned the nickname the Circus City because Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus moved its winter quarters to the beachy town in 1927. These days, the weather, leisurely pace of life, and lack of income tax all attract people to Florida. Sarasota, in particular, has become a magnet for workers, according to a January LinkedIn report.

10. Boulder, Colorado
People sitting on a bench on a street in Boulder, Colorado.
Boulder, Colorado.

Page Light Studios/Shutterstock

Population of metro area: 105,898

Median home price: $945,000

Median monthly rent: $2,995

Median household income: $75,923

Climate Vulnerability Index: 12th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: Not far from the Rocky Mountains, Boulder is known for outdoorsy activities, including rock climbing, hiking, skiing, and cycling. The city's median age is 28.6, giving it a youthful, lively energy.

9. Austin
An aerial view of Austin at sunset.
Austin.

Kruck20/Getty Images

Population of metro area: 979,882

Median home price: $484,900

Median monthly rent: $2,000

Median household income: $91,501

Climate Vulnerability Index: 20th percentile (lower vulnerability)

Known for: An artsy, contemporary city, Austin is known for its vibrant nightlife, live music, eclectic cuisine, and college scene. It also has a long history of attracting tech giants, and even more companies have opened offices there since the pandemic. West Coasters in the industry have moved to the city, lured by the booming job market and comparatively low cost of living.

8. Virginia Beach, Virginia
Aerial view of the Virginia Beach oceanfront.
Virginia Beach, Virginia.

Kyle J Little/Shutterstock

Population of metro area: 453,649

Median home price: $384,500

Median monthly rent: $2,195

Median household income: $91,141

Climate Vulnerability Index: 18th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: Boasting a beloved boardwalk, Virginia Beach has miles of beaches, delectable seafood, and a mild climate. Murals, museums, and shops in the ViBe Creative District give the seaside destination some arty flair, too.

7. Huntsville, Alabama
Buildings on the edge of a lake in Huntsville, Alabama.
Huntsville, Alabama.

Denis Tangney/Getty Images

Population of metro area: 225,564

Median home price: $315,000

Median monthly rent: $1,465

Median household income: $73,319

Climate Vulnerability Index: 54th percentile (average vulnerability)

Known for: Since the start of the US space program in the 1950s Huntsville has been a hub for the aerospace and defense industries. Today it's bursting with startups, alongside long-standing workplaces like NASA and Boeing. Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin also has a facility for building rocket engines in Huntsville.

6. Raleigh, North Carolina
Aerial view of downtown Raleigh, North Carolina
Raleigh, North Carolina.

Getty Images

Population of metro area: 482,295

Median home price: $450,000

Median monthly rent: $1,826

Median household income: $86,309

Climate Vulnerability Index: 13th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: This capital city has a busy downtown, free museums, and miles of hiking trails. Part of North Carolina's Research Triangle, Raleigh has a long history of fostering technology and science companies, creating a strong local economy.

5. Charlotte, North Carolina
Aerial view of downtown Charlotte, North Carolina.
Charlotte, North Carolina.

Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 911,311

Median home price: $424,900

Median monthly rent: $1,950

Median household income: $80,581

Climate Vulnerability Index: 35th percentile (lower vulnerability)

Known for: Second only to New York, Charlotte is a bustling banking hub. Locals can root for the city's professional basketball, football, and soccer teams or soak up the art and food scenes.

4. Greenville, South Carolina
Falls Park on the Reedy in Greenville at dusk.
Greenville, South Carolina.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

Population of the metro area: 72,824

Median home price: $366,500

Median monthly rent: $1,725

Median household income: $73,536

Climate Vulnerability Index: 55th percentile (average vulnerability)

Known for: In the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Greenville attracts new residents with its moderate climate, burgeoning food reputation, and natural beauty. Greenville is also home to several major corporations, including Michelin, GE, and Lockheed Martin.

3. Colorado Springs, Colorado
Colorado, Springs
Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Jacob Boomsma/Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 488,664

Median home price: $440,000

Median monthly rent: $1,873

Median household income: $83,215

Climate Vulnerability Index: 34th percentile (average vulnerability)

Known for: The US Olympic and Paralympic Training Center is located in Colorado Springs, making the city especially attractive to athletes. There are hundreds of miles of trails for hiking and mountain biking, and white water rafting is a popular summer activity. From the Garden of the Gods to the iconic Pikes Peak, gorgeous natural sights adorn the area.

2. Boise, Idaho
A road with mountains behind it in Boise, Idaho.
Boise, Idaho.

vkbhat / Getty Images

Population of the metro area: 235,421

Median home price: $472,500

Median monthly rent: $1,774

Median household income: $79,977

Climate Vulnerability Index: 9th percentile (lowest vulnerability)

Known for: Thousands of new residents flocked to Idaho's capital in the past decade, making it the US's fastest-growing city in 2018. Boise blends sought-after amenities such as microbreweries and cider houses with nearby scenic state parks full of rivers, canyons, and mountains.

1. Naples, Florida
Naples, Florida
Naples, Florida

Mint Images/Getty Ima

Population of the metro area: 19,704

Median home price: $629,500

Median monthly rent: $6,100

Median household income: $135,657

Climate Vulnerability Index: 32nd percentile (lower vulnerability)

Known for: Located on Florida's Gulf Coast, Naples is like a postcard come to life, with white-sand beaches, luxurious residences, and over 1,350 holes of golf. The city has long attracted wealthy residents who can afford the high housing costs. Right now a $295 million compound is up for grabs, the most expensive home for sale in the US.

Sources: Population and income data are from the US Census, median home price from Realtor.com, median rent from Zillow, and climate information from the Climate Vulnerability Index.

This story was originally published on May 15, 2024, and most recently updated on December 4.

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Photos show the impact of climate change on national parks

woman on Grand Prismatic Spring Overlook at Yellowstone National Park
Climate change threatens many beloved US national parks, including Yellowstone.

Ellen Pabst dos Reis/Getty Images

  • Climate change poses a threat to US national parks like Yellowstone.
  • Warmer temperatures and extreme weather impact both ecosystems and visitors.
  • Advocates hope witnessing changes to the parks will inspire visitors to help protect them.

Each year, over 300 million visitors explore the hundreds of parks that make up the US National Park system. These spaces offer unparalleled views of mountains and forests, immersing people in the sights and sounds of nature that are often missing from their everyday lives.

But the national parks are in trouble. "Most of our parks have multiple assaults on them," Chad Lord, senior director of environmental policy and climate change with the National Parks Conservation Association advocacy group, told Business Insider.

From hotter, drier weather to invasive species to more powerful storms, many of the country's parks are experiencing dramatic changes. For example, warming temperatures are making glaciers disappear from Glacier National Park.

From Alaska to Florida, here are six examples of how the climate crisis is changing national parks.

Glacier National Park is a geological marvel.
A black-and-white photo of Grinnell Glacier in 1938
Grinnell Glacier at Glacier National Park in 1938.

TJ Hileman/Glacier National Park Archives

Montana's Glacier National Park sprawls over 1,500 miles, encompassing mountains, valleys, and glacial lakes. Even if you've never visited, you might recognize the park's Going-to-the-Sun Road, which was featured in the 1980 movie "The Shining."

Throughout the park, grizzly bears graze on huckleberries. Little rodent-like pikas, lynx, and Harlequin ducks are also adapted to the area's chilly weather.

Glacier National Park's glaciers are melting.
Grinnell Glacier with an exposed glacial lake
Over the past 80 years, Grinnell Glacier has shrunk enormously due to warming temperatures.

Lisa McKeon/USGS Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center

The park once held 80 glaciers. In 2015, NPS estimated only 26 were left. Satellites have captured the remaining few as they continue to shrink.

Warming temperatures are driving the glaciers' disappearance, which will impact the plants and animals that live there.

For example, mountain goats rely on snow patches to stay cool during the summer. In the winter, the snow helps keep tiny mouse-like rodents, called pikas, insulated from the bitter cold.

Denali National Park has breathtaking views.
A bus on Denali Park Road
A bus takes visitors along Denali Park Road.

Kent Miller/NPS Photo

Together the Denali National Park and Preserve are larger than New Hampshire, stretching nearly 9,500 square miles of Alaskan terrain. Winter days there are short and cold, with temperatures as low as -40 degrees Fahrenheit.

The park originally began as a way to protect Dall sheep. Today, an estimated 2,000 big-horned sheep brave the chilly climate. Red foxes, snowshoe hares, and dozens of bird species are also around, in addition to grizzlies, wolves, and moose. Even a small wood frog, the park's only amphibian, can survive the subarctic environment.

Part of Denali's road has been impassable for years.
Heavy machinery and a person walking near a landslide on Denali Road
About half of Denali Road is obstructed by a landslide that keeps moving.

WeeBee Aschenbrenner/NPS Photo

In the 1960s, the Pretty Rocks landslide began cracking the road leading to the park. In 2014, the landslide was moving a few inches every year. By 2021, it was moving a few inches per hour. The road is now closed at about its halfway point, cutting off vehicle access to sites like Wonder Lake.

While the annual average temperature of the park was once well below freezing, it's now close to 32 °F, according to NPS. The warmer weather and melting permafrost is making the landslide move more quickly. The road is cut into a rock glacier, "and little bits of climate warming are causing this big kind of slump, and the road is falling off the cliff," said Cassidy Jones, a senior visitation program manager with NPCA.

The trees are tall and mighty at Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.
A woman hugs a giant sequoia tree
Sequoias can be hundreds of feet tall and very wide, making some of the largest on Earth.

Marji Lang/LightRocket via Getty Images

At Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, visitors can enjoy over 1,300 square miles of trails, trees, foothills, and lakes. Groves of sequoia trees dominate some parts of the landscape, including the famous General Sherman tree towering almost 275 feet high. With its 100-foot circumference, it's one of the largest trees by volume in the world.

Closer to the ground, vivid flora like Evalyn's jewel flower grow and kingsnakes slither. Gophers, skunks, and squirrels scamper about, along with larger mammals like black bears, mule deer, and mountain lions. The parks span a range of habitats, making it a bird-watcher's paradise.

A 2021 fire ravaged swaths of the Sequoia National Park.
A fire in Sequoia National Park
Thousands of sequoia trees burned during recent California fires.

Joe Suarez/NPS

In 2021, lightning struck several areas, igniting what became the KNP Complex Fire. A year earlier, the Castle Fire also ravaged Sequoia National Park. Fires over those two years killed between 8,400 to 12,000 sequoias. Some of the trees were thousands of years old.

Forest fires aren't uncommon, but the sequoias were already vulnerable after a lengthy drought. A combination of low humidity and high temperatures can be a dangerous combination when fires erupt. "Fires have gotten bigger and hotter," Jones said.

Sequoias have long been able to withstand fires, she said. "It tells you something different is going on in terms of just the way the fire is behaving, in the amplification of fire weather," she said.

Yellowstone is the US's first national park.
Bison on a road in Yellowstone National Park with cars in the distance
Bison sometimes stop traffic in Yellowstone National Park.

William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images

Covering 3,500 miles, most of it in Wyoming, Yellowstone became the US's first national park in 1872. It's home to Old Faithful, as well as many more geysers and hot springs.

Visitors sometimes have to halt their vehicles for bison crossing the road, and moose, bobcats, badgers, bats, and the many other species that live in the park.

However, warmer temperatures are speeding up snowmelt, changing vegetation, and leading to less water in some areas — all of which will likely force some wildlife to relocate. Every year, pronghorn antelope migrate through the park, a journey that's already risky as they cross over roads and fences. A lack of water and food could alter their path.

Yellowstone experienced extensive damage during a flood in 2022.
Flood waters cover a road in Yellowstone National Park
Flooding caused widespread damage in Yellowstone in 2022.

Jacob W. Frank/National Park Service via Getty Images

A mix of rain and snowmelt caused severe flooding in June 2022. The rushing water damaged roads, structures, and trails. NPS called it an unprecedented, 500-year flood. While the disaster was rare, warmer temperatures are increasing snowmelt and rain is falling instead of snow. Floods could become more common as the climate continues to change.

Death Valley has breathtaking views, day and night.
Mountains in Death Valley National Park
Despite its desert climate, Death Valley is home to many species of plants and animals.

George Rose/Getty Images

Along the California-Nevada border, Death Valley draws visitors keen to see the salt flats, sand dunes, and craters. It's 3.4 million acres of wilderness, making it one of the largest national parks in the country. At night, its remote location and aridity make it ideal for stargazing.

The scorching desert climate might not seem hospitable to many kinds of life. Yet jackrabbits, bats, tortoises, and roadrunners have all thrived in the park.

Death Valley is getting hotter by the year.
A digital thermometer near the Furnace Creek Visitor Center displays 131 degrees Fahrenheit
Death Valley's summers are getting hotter.

J. Jurado/National Park Service

Extreme heat is nothing new for Death Valley. But in recent years, temperatures regularly soar past 125 degrees Fahrenheit in July. Plus, triple-digits can extend into October, and the nights don't get as cool.

The sizzling weather can be dangerous for visitors and residents, and plants and animals have difficulty coping, too. Some animals may start migrating to cooler climates, but some species may not survive. For example, the extremely rare Devils Home pupfish population, found only in Death Valley, has been in decline since the 1990s.

The Everglades host a wealth of biodiversity.
A satellite image of Ingraham Lake in the Everglades in 1984
A satellite image of Ingraham Lake in the Everglades in 1984.

Google Earth

Located in Southern Florida, the Everglades National Park is a patchwork of unique ecosystems, from mangroves to pinelands. With 1.5 million acres of land, it has space for estuaries, giant cypress trees, and marshy rivers.

With so many habitats, a huge range of species create the delicate web of life that is the Everglades. Dozens of species of lizards and snakes scuttle and slither, while ducks, doves, and nighthawks mingle not far from flamingos. River otters and manatees also swim through different parts of the park.

Sea-level rise threatens the Everglades' Cape Sable.
A satellite image of Ingraham Lake in the Everglades in 2024
Cape Sable sits at the bottom of the Everglades.

Google Earth

Elevated temperatures, more-intense hurricanes, and rising sea levels are among the challenges the Everglades face. When salty seawater seeps into the park's coastal landscape, it can harm rare tropical orchids and other vegetation that can't cope with increased salinity.

Cape Sable lies at Florida's southwestern tip. Sea levels have risen at an accelerated pace over the last 100 years, according to NPS. Hurricanes and tropical storms have washed seawater into what was once freshwater marshes and lakes. The incursion threatens not only mangrove forests but wildlife like the Cape Sable seaside sparrow, which is only found in this unique habitat.

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The 10 countries with the most Americans living abroad

a group of people eating fresh fruit in Mexico
Millions of Americans live abroad, either temporarily or permanently.

Tony Anderson/Getty Images

  • Millions of Americans live abroad, including in Mexico and Canada.
  • It's hard to know exactly how many US citizens live overseas and all their reasons for moving.
  • Many say the cost of living, healthcare, and safety concerns draw them to different countries.

Whether it's wanderlust, retirement, cost of living, family ties, or other reasons, some Americans long to live abroad.

They tend to flock to certain parts of the globe more than others. The US's closest neighbors, Mexico and Canada, are top picks.

Others include locations like the UK and Australia where English is the primary language.

Yet, there are a few on the list that may surprise you.

Using census data, the Association of Americans Resident Overseas estimated the countries with the highest number of US citizens.

It's a rough estimate since embassies don't keep an official registry of Americans overseas and the US census doesn't track citizens abroad, Doris L. Speer, president of the nonprofit AARO, told Business Insider via email.

Here are the top 10 countries where Americans are choosing to live after they leave the US, according to the AARO.

10. Spain: an estimated 108,684 US citizens
People looking at Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, Spain
People looking at Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

From the Sierra Nevada Mountains to the Mediterranean coast, Spain has a diverse landscape with bustling cities and charming towns in between.

Compared to other European countries, its cost of living is relatively low. Vibrant nightlife, sunny beaches, high-quality healthcare, and a relaxed lifestyle all make Americans' lists of reasons to move to Spain, while some retirees find their money goes further in Spain.

Non-Spanish and non-Catalan speakers may have trouble navigating some parts of the country, and smaller homes, a slower pace, and unfamiliar bureaucracy all take getting used to for some Americans.

Spain offers a yearlong digital nomad visa. Retirees can apply for a non-lucrative visa (or NLV), which allows them to live, but not work, in the country.

GDP: $1.73 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #15

9. Japan: an estimated 111,021 US citizens
Shibuya pedestrian crossing and city lights, Tokyo, Japan
Shibuya crossing in Tokyo, Japan.

Marco Bottigelli/Getty Images

Japan has a population of over 124 million people, and just a tiny fraction of that number are US citizens.

Because the country's population is over 97% Japanese, Americans tend to stick out.

"It was a culture shock to see only one type of ethnicity all around me at all times," Genie Doi, who is Korean-American, recently told BI.

However, Japan's safety, scenery, and quality of life can be huge incentives to move there.

"I was very concerned about gun violence, which is almost nonexistent in Japan," Floridian Alex Evans told BI in 2023. He and his family moved to Mukaishima Island, Japan, in June 2022.

Other US citizens have said some challenges living in the country include a lack of size inclusivity in clothing, difficulties with the language — even with years of study — and the time it takes to travel to other countries from an island nation.

Foreigners who want to live in Japan for six months can apply for a "digital nomad" residence. Those looking to stay even longer can look into visas on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs site.

GDP: $4.07 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #4

8. France: an estimated 117,462 US citizens
Rows of trees line a busy street at the Arc de Triomphe.
The Arc de Triomphe in Paris, France.

HADI ZAHER/Getty Images

From 1954's "Sabrina" to "Emily in Paris," Americans' fascination with France has existed for decades.

US citizens who immigrate there rave about everything from the food to the fashion to the art and architecture.

However, at least a few US citizens have found the visa process tricky and had difficulty finding housing.

Particularly in Paris, some Americans said racism is prevalent. Others had trouble making friends or experienced a language barrier if they didn't speak French.

Filling out lots of forms and waiting for answers isn't uncommon. "The bureaucracy is unbelievably frustrating," Rick Jones, who moved to Paris in 2018, told BI in July.

Francophiles hoping to work or attend school can apply for residence cards or student visas.

GDP: $3.17 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #7

7. South Korea: an estimated 129,499 US citizens
A narrow alleyway lined with preserved, historic homes in Bokchon Hanok Village; Seoul, Korea.
The Bukchon Hanok Village in Seoul, South Korea.

William Tang/Design Pics Editorial/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Visitors flock to South Korea to revel in the land of K-pop and K-dramas or to experience the food, shopping, museums, and natural wonders.

US citizens who stay longer have touted universal healthcare, a good quality of life, and convenient public transportation as reasons to love Korea. The high-speed trains cover much of the country, making it easy to travel between big cities.

Among the challenges new residents to Korea face are difficulty with the language, high housing prices, finding employment, and the distance from the US.

Moving to South Korea requires a visa, with most requirements involving work, school, or family. Job hunters can stay for six months with the possibility of extending the visa to a year.

GDP: $1.87 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #12

6. Australia: an estimated 218,216 US citizens
Melbourne skyline and bridge at dusk
The skyline in Melbourne, Australia.

Kokkai Ng/Getty Images

Australia is known for its beautiful beaches and gorgeous weather. For those looking to live there permanently, though, it also boasts a solid economy, good healthcare, childcare stipends, and perks like retirement assistance.

Melbourne and Sydney are among the top 10 most livable cities in the 2024 Economist Intelligence Unit's Global Liveability Index. The country is also one of the most welcoming of migrants, based on a 2019 Gallup survey.

However, for Americans, it is very far from home. It can take nearly 24 hours to travel from the East Coast of the US to Australia.

Another potential downside is that the country's drier, hotter weather is expected to worsen due to the climate crisis, according to the Australian government.

There are visa options for people who want to call Australia home. However, its immigration laws tend to favor the wealthy, giving preference to individuals with education qualifications, professional experience, and who are English-speaking. The Global Talent Program offers visas to "exceptionally talented and prominent individuals."

GDP: $1.8 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #14

5. Germany: an estimated 238,652 US citizens
In the evening, a boat sails along the Spree near the Reichstag building
A boat sails along the Spree River in Berlin, Germany.

Hannes P Albert/picture alliance via Getty Images

For decades, Germany has been Europe's economic powerhouse. Many American immigrants to the country found job opportunities, reliable public healthcare, affordable childcare, and a generous amount of time off from work.

Weeks of vacation time allowed them the opportunity to travel around Europe. The country shares a border with Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, and Switzerland.

Recently, Germany's economic growth has slowed, the Associated Press reported in 2023. This fall, the government announced tighter border controls and some political analysts are concerned about the re-emergence of far-right politics in recent elections.

Skilled workers can apply for visas and stay for 12 months while looking for a job. The country also recently eased some of its rules around obtaining citizenship, the AP reported in January.

GDP: $4.71 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #3

4. Israel: an estimated 281,137 US citizens
Tel Aviv
The skyline in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Richard T. Nowitz/Getty Images

Over the years, Israel has attracted high-tech startups and wealthy individuals, fueling a luxury real estate boom in some cities.

However, Israel's conflict with Hamas and the continued invasion of Gaza have slowed the inflow of millionaires who no longer consider the country a safe haven, according to one investment migration advisory firm.

While many US citizens move to cities far from the conflicts, others are living in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Some have blamed these settlers for increased violence against Palestinians over the past year.

Those wishing to move to Israel need a visa. The country's Law of Return allows those with Jewish parents or grandparents to apply for citizenship.

GDP: $528 billion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #30

3. United Kingdom: an estimated 325,321 US citizens
View of Big Ben, London
A view of Big Ben in London, England.

Jakub Porzycki/Getty Images

Like Canada, the UK is full of native English speakers, which can ease the transition to living in a new country.

The financial website Investopedia found that prescriptions, groceries, and rent are often cheaper in the UK compared to the US, but gas and energy prices can be higher depending on where you live.

Americans living in the UK who spoke with BI have cited its National Health Service, proximity to the rest of Europe, and work-life balance as benefits of their new home.

These perks can offset lower wages and homesickness.

"Despite lower take-home pay, I'm way less stressed," Wales resident Regina Beach told BI in 2023. "The five-weeks paid holiday — that everyone actually takes — certainly helps."

Some potential downsides, which Americans may struggle to adjust to include smaller homes and the rainy weather. The UK's pub culture isn't for everyone, either.

You can apply for work and study visas to start living in the UK. The government's website provides information on settlement, which allows you to live, work, and study there for good.

GDP: $3.59 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #6

2. Canada: an estimated 1,050,898 US citizens
A couple sitting on the harbourfront in Toronto, looking out at a view of the city's skyline.
The skyline in Toronto, Canada.

Grant Faint/Getty Images

The US's neighbor to the north has scenic beauty, vibrant cities, a large English-speaking population, and universal healthcare. These are all attractive reasons for Americans to relocate, though temporary or permanent residency is a little more difficult to attain than in Mexico.

Americans won't necessarily find affordable housing in some of the country's larger cities, like Toronto and Vancouver. But for some, Canada offers a feeling of safety, especially with the US's high rates of gun violence.

Despite the benefits of universal healthcare, some transplants from the US found that there can be long waiting lists for specialists and certain treatments.

While the country does offer paths to becoming a permanent resident or citizen, they're often tied to work or family connections. Skilled workers and entrepreneurs can apply for visas, and relatives can sponsor certain family members so they can live, study, and work in the country.

GDP: $2.21 trillion

Economy ranking based on GDP: #9

1. Mexico: an estimated 1,182,346 US citizens
A cable car above a neighborhood in Mexico City
The Cablebus Public Transportation System above the Iztapalapa neighborhood in Mexico City.

Yuri Cortez/AFP via Getty Images

Mexico draws many Americans who want to stay close to friends and family while settling in a new country.

The ability to hop across the border to use their Medicare is also important for many retirees, she said.

Housing, groceries, and healthcare are typically less expensive than in the US, though the influx of newcomers is causing rising rents and housing shortages in some areas like Mexico City.

Many US citizens obtain a temporary resident visa that allows them to live in Mexico for up to four years. Retirees looking to stay can apply for a permanent resident visa, which allows them to stay indefinitely.

GDP: $1.85 trillion, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Economy ranking based on GDP: #13

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9 scientific breakthroughs that resulted from Napoleon's invasion of Egypt

A still from the movie shows Joaquim Pheonix portraying Napoleon looking away from the camera as troops move through the desert in the background.
Joaquim Pheonix played "Napoleon" in Ridley Scott's last biopic.

Apple TV+

  • When Napoleon invaded Egypt, he brought dozens of scientists with him.
  • Astronomers, mathematicians, and naturalists spent three years studying the country.
  • Napoleon's invasion failed, but it led to some groundbreaking scientific work.

It's been a year since Ridley Scott's "Napoleon" debuted. It earned three Oscar nominations, including for visual effects and costumes. The film had epic battles and sulky moments from Joaquin Phoenix, who portrayed the general.

However, the movie didn't cover much about Napoleon Bonaparte's interest in science, which had a profound impact on France's intellectual pursuits following his reign.

When Napoleon invaded Egypt in July 1798, he brought more than just tens of thousands of soldiers. He also recruited over 150 scientists, known as savants, to accompany him.

They arrived "with the aim of both study and exploitation," according to one archaeologist.

A little over a month later, on August 23, 1798, the scientific society called the Institut d'Égypte, which still exists today, held its inaugural meeting in a lavish palace in Cairo and appointed Napoleon as its first vice president.

Napoleon wanted to use the country's natural resources, history, and culture for France's benefit. He urged the savants to focus on projects like improving bread ovens, purifying the Nile's water, and brewing beer without hops.

The scientists' tasks were made more difficult because the ship carrying much of their surveying and scientific equipment had sunk. Then, after a series of defeats in Egypt, Napoleon returned to France in 1799 and left many of the scientists stranded.

Despite setbacks, the engineers, mathematicians, naturalists, and others spent nearly three years surveying, documenting, and collecting everything from antiquities to mummified remains to animals largely unknown to the West.

Their work led to some novel discoveries, helped formalize sciences like archaeology, and spurred an infatuation with Egypt that's continued ever since.

1. The discovery that chemical reactions are reversible
Crumbling Graeco-Roman remains at Wadi Natron, with only a single wall standing made of tan bricks
Graeco-Roman remains near Wadi El Natrun, the area where Berthollet saw natron.

Werner Forman/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Before chemist Claude-Louis Berthollet's realization, the concept that chemical reactions could be reversible wasn't universally accepted.

However, Berthollet found strong evidence to support the idea while studying the salt deposits in the lakes of the Natron Valley.

Natron, a naturally occurring salt, covered the limestone in the lakes. Ancient Egyptians had used the substance to preserve mummified bodies because it absorbed moisture and dissolved fat.

Berthollet observed that the limestone, which contained calcium carbonate, chemically reacted with salt, aka sodium chloride, to produce natron, made of sodium carbonate.

In laboratory conditions, chemists knew that the exact opposite reaction was possible, which led Berthollet to reasonably conclude that chemical reactions were reversible and that heat and different amounts of a substance could determine which way the reaction went.

2. A more formal approach to archaeology
Drawing of the Edfu Temple in Egypt by Vivant Denon showing cracks in the structure and larger towers in the background
Denon's drawing of the Edfu Temple. The people give a sense of the huge scale of the monuments.

Art Media/Print Collector/Getty Images

In Napoleon's time, archaeology wasn't yet a formal science. Most savants had little experience with artifacts. Sand still buried some temples that had yet to be excavated.

Dominique-Vivant Denon, an artist and writer, was awed by the ancient monuments he saw. He went back to France with Napoleon and quickly published a book with his descriptions and drawings, "Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt."

At the time of Napoleon's invasion, travelers had long known of Alexandria, Cairo, and other parts of Lower Egypt. The Great Pyramids and Sphinx were famous. But Upper Egypt wasn't as well known.

That changed when the savants arrived. "The whole army, suddenly and with one accord, stood in amazement... and clapped their hands with delight," Denon later wrote.

His drawings and descriptions of the temples and ruins at Thebes, Esna, Edfu, and Karnak proved immensely popular. Many were depicted in fashionable paintings and inspired decor trends.

Since he'd had to capture everything in short bursts of time, Denon had pushed for two commissions of savants to return and better document the monuments.

Napoleon's architects and engineers made careful drawings and took measurements of a large number of monuments. Others attempted to measure the pyramids. (Napoleon never shot them with cannons, in case you were wondering.)

3. Savigny created a new way to classify insects
A number of drawings of arachnids of different types with different parts drawn separately, like eyes and jaws
Savigny's intricate drawings of arachnids from the from Description de l'Egypte.

De Agostini Editorial via Getty Images

Just 21 and a botanist by training when he arrived in Egypt, Jules-César Savigny collected invertebrates like worms, bees, spiders, snails, and flies. He also took specimens of starfish, coral, and sea urchins.

When he was back in France, Savigny needed to organize the 1,500 species of insects he'd brought from Egypt. There didn't yet exist a systematic way to distinguish one species of moth or butterfly from another. So Savigny invented one.

Surprisingly, the bugs' mouth parts had sufficient differences to allow Savigny to separate them into species. He pored over the tiny jaws of the insects. He drew over 1,000 images of specimens, some of which were only a centimeter long.

Savigny applied the same rigor to arachnids, worms, and other animals that lacked backbones. Some of his classification methods are still in use today.

4. The discovery of a new species of crocodile that took 200 years to confirm
A drawing of two crocodiles, one full size and smaller one in front
Geoffroy's depiction of the Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) from the Description de l'Egypte.

De Agostini Editorial via Getty Images

Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire was convinced there were two species of crocodiles in the Nile.

Like Savigny, Geoffroy was a prolific collector. While in Egypt, he studied bats, mongooses, tortoises, and more.

One reason Geoffroy was able to dissect and stuff so many specimens was he had purchased an 11-year-old enslaved boy, whom he trained to help with his work.

Geoffroy closely examined so many different kinds of animals that he started to see patterns between even very different species. It led to his theory of a "unity of plan" or "unity of composition" a kind of quasi-evolutionary idea that Charles Darwin would reference decades later.

Geoffroy's theories often irritated his fellow naturalists. That includes when he attempted to demonstrate a mummified crocodile he'd taken from Egypt represented a separate species.

Its jaw was completely different from the Nile crocodile, Geoffroy said. Plus, it was less aggressive. One had even been on display in Paris. "It took pleasure in being patted; and anyone might, without the least danger, open its mouth, and place his hand between its teeth," according to one account.

His colleagues didn't believe him. However, over 200 years later, biologist Evon Hekkala and a team of researchers analyzed the DNA of modern crocodiles and some of Geoffroy's mummies to confirm his suspicions. Indeed, they showed two separate species swam in the Nile: Crocodylus niloticus and Crocodylus suchus.

5. The advent of ophthalmology
An engraving of the house of Osman Bey with elaborate columns, several levels, a brick wall, and people and a camel and horses in the courtyard
An engraving from the Description de l'Egypte showing the interior courtyard of a house.

Science & Society Picture Library via Getty Images

The French physicians who accompanied Napoleon encountered unfamiliar illnesses in Egpyt. One disease that traveled with them back to Europe was something they called Egyptian ophthalmia. Now known as trachoma, it can cause itchy, swollen eyes and lead to blindness.

It became so prevalent that physicians all over Europe started studying the disease. Geoffroy, who contracted it, was "totally blind" for weeks, he wrote.

Up to that point, ophthalmology wasn't a formalized branch of scientific research, but the race to find the origin of this disease laid the groundwork for its creation.

Eventually, British physician John Vetch realized the pus from an infected eye could spread the disease. Knowing it was contagious, Vetch developed methods of prevention and treatment that are considered milestones in the history of ophthalmology.

6. The Rosetta Stone helped Champollion decipher hieroglyphs
A man and woman in 1930s clothing stand in front of and behind the Rosetta Stone
The Rosetta Stone is housed at the British Museum.

Fox Photos/Getty Images

For centuries, no one could read hieroglyphs, the pictorial writing that covered many Egyptian monuments.

When the French found the Rosetta Stone during their invasion, they knew it could serve as a kind of translation key.

Deciphering hieroglyphs would allow scholars to read the writing on scores of other Ancient Egyptian texts and monuments.

In 1801, the British were negotiating for France's surrender. One stipulation was that the British would take the antiquities and the savants' collections, which included the Rosetta Stone.

Geoffroy told the British that the savants would "destroy our property, we will disperse it in the Libyan sands, or we will throw it into the sea" before they handed it over. They were allowed to keep their notes and collections. But not the slab.

Three texts were inscribed on the stone in Egyptian hieroglyphs, an Egyptian cursive script derived from hieroglyphs, and Ancient Greek. Since the three were identical, the Greek writing could help researchers decipher the hieroglyphs.

It took two decades for French scholar Jean-François Champollion to translate them. Champollion made use of a copy the French savants had taken of the slab and published.

The Rosetta Stone is currently in the British Museum. Egypt has been trying to get it back, calling it a "spoil of war."

7. The invention of an engraving machine that sped up the printing process
A drawing of a domed mosque and tall tower in Cairo circa 1798
Just one of the many detailed engravings added to the Description de l'Egypte, this one of a mosque in Cairo.

Science & Society Picture Library via Getty Images

When the savants returned to France, many worked on compiling the multi-volume book "Description de l'Égypte," which amounted to 7,000 pages encompassing what they'd seen and studied in Egypt.

To save some of the laborious work of engraving, engineer Nicolas-Jacques Conté created a machine that automated part of the process.

To print the hundreds of illustrations, engravers first had to transfer them to copper plates.

For plates with monuments, Conté's machine could engrave the sky in the background. The engraver could program it to create clouds as well.

What originally would've taken six to eight months could be completed in just a few days.

It was still a massive undertaking and considered to be the most ambitious work of France in the early 19th Century. The first volume wasn't printed until 1809. The final volume came out in the late 1820s, nearly a decade after Napoloen's death.

8. The science of geology flourished
Drawings of Fossil shells found in Egypt printed in 1817
Fossil shells found by François-Michel de Rozière from Description de l'Egypte.

De Agostini Editorial/ICAS94/Contributor via Getty Images

Many savants were tasked with documenting the natural history of Egypt. Mining engineer François-Michel de Rozière had the difficult job of describing the country's rocks and minerals.

Decades before Napoleon's invasion, many naturalists started adopting Carl Linnaeus' two-word system for naming plants and animals. But rocks and minerals lacked a similar widely accepted language.

To accurately capture the nuances of the granite or shells he saw, Rozière painstakingly described their textures, layers, and colors. One description referenced "transparent quartz, yellowish feldspath, and black schist."

He also understood the importance of including illustrations of the rocks, which made them much easier for other savants to identify. In the Description de l'Egypte, his fifteen plates contained over 100 colorful illustrations of porphyry, basalt, and other rocks and fossils.

Though Napoleon didn't use the geological knowledge his savants gathered in Egypt, some argue that his invasion spurred the creation of military geology. Soon, scientists were surveying unfamiliar terrain during campaigns and using their knowledge for engineering projects.

9. An attempt to date Egyptian antiquity
A circular part of a ceiling with zodiac symbols carved into it
The Dendera zodiac is currently in the Louvre.

JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images

In the midst of his work on the Rosetta Stone, Champollion decried the removal of another piece of Ancient Egyptian history from the country.

During a quick visit to the Dendera temple, Denon had sketched the ceiling, where Ancient Egyptians had carved zodiac signs, Egyptian constellations, and other figures into the stone. Other engineers made more detailed drawings of the intricate design.

In 1821, a French expedition dynamited part of the temple and took the zodiac ceiling to France. Champollion worried the removal of the zodiac would lead to the "complete destruction" of the rest of the ceiling and stripped the artifact of important context.

French scholars debated whether they could use depicted features like eclipses to date its creation. At the time, no one knew exactly how far back in time human history stretched. Some estimated the zodiac was older than 5,000 years BCE. Others suggested more recent dates such as 800 BCE. Champollion thought deciphering hieroglyphics would offer a more reliable dating method than an interpretation of the ancient sky.

More recent dating techniques put the Dendera zodiac at around 50 BCE, around Cleopatra's era. One researcher called it "the only complete map that we have of an ancient sky" from that era. It remains in the Louvre Museum in Paris.

This story was originally published on December 2, 2023, and most recently updated on November 14, 2024.

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Researchers found a treasure trove of fossils in a Bahamian blue hole that could transform our understanding of the island

A blue hole filled with water on Abaco Island
The Bahamas' blue holes contain astonishing fossils that highlight the islands' natural history.

Nancy Albury

  • Twenty years ago, a cave diver found thousands of fossils in a blue hole on Great Abaco Island.
  • The fossils reveal the island's Ice Age history, with pristine specimens of now-extinct species.
  • Hurricane Dorian nearly destroyed researchers' collections, and the blue holes' future is uncertain.

Nestled in The Bahamas on Great Abaco Island is a blue hole, Sawmill Sink, that's filled with a trove of well-preserved fossils that show how much the island has changed since the last Ice Age.

For over a decade, starting in 2005, researchers dove to retrieve the scientific treasure. "This was probably the most important site I'd ever had a chance to get involved with," David Steadman, a curator emeritus with the Florida Museum of Natural History, told Business Insider.

But the excavations stopped about five years ago when a devastating hurricane wreaked havoc on the island, the fossil collection, and the researchers' plans to protect the pristine blue holes.

The researchers collected thousands of Sawmill Sink's fossils before the hurricane. But the rest remain in its underwater depths, perhaps forever.

Thousands of years ago, a sinkhole flooded as sea levels rose.
A blue hole filled with dark water with trees in the background
Sawmill Sink is a blue hole that's preserved fossils for thousands of years.

Nancy Albury

About 190 miles east of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies the island of Great Abaco.

"The really dramatic thing about The Bahamas in general, and Abaco in particular, is how much the land area changes during ice ages," Steadman said.

Thousands of years ago, Abaco was 10 times as big as today, but as sea levels rose following the last Ice Age, water flooded the island, shrinking its shores.

Abaco is made of limestone. So when the island floods, groundwater flows through the porous rock, causing caves to collapse into sinkholes, which then fill with water forming blue holes — like Sawmill Sink.

Sawmill Sink dips 150 feet below sea level and has a vast network of underground passages that extend for miles.

In 2005, diver Brian Kakuk descended into some of those passages and spotted a wealth of bones that opened a door to the island's ancient past.

Tortoise shells and crocodile skulls caught a cave diver’s attention.
A scuba diver in an underwater cave with stalactites all around
Sawmill Sink is a challenging environment to dive in.

Brian Kakuk

Some of the bones belonged to tortoises and crocodiles. These animals no longer live on Abaco, so their bones offer a peek into a vastly different time.

What makes Sawmill Sink unique is how well it's preserved the island's natural history.

"The conditions there are in part what saved this site from being either looted or somehow vandalized through time because it was just too difficult a place for cave divers to get access," Steadman said.

It's dark with narrow crevices and passages in the limestone that are a tight fit for anyone to shimmy through. There are stalactites and stalagmites from when the cave was above the water, with ribbony helictites and hollow tubes known as soda straws jutting out from the walls.

At the hole's surface, a float of freshwater extends down 30 feet. Below that lies 20 feet of a toxic brew of hydrogen sulfide and freshwater that stinks of rotten eggs and burns the skin.

Under the opaque and corrosive layer was saltwater, devoid of oxygen and UV light, just right for preserving the fossils.

Kakuk, an experienced diver, made sure his skin was covered and used scuba equipment like rebreathers to safely navigate the dangers.

Some fossils were so well-preserved that experts could pinpoint their age.
A tortoise shell and crocodile skull on a white background
Large tortoises and land-dwelling crocodiles once lived on the island but are now extinct there.

Kristen Grace/Florida Museum

Once Kakuk found the bones, he got in touch with geologist Nancy Albury.

Albury was a cave diver, too. Her interest in caving and background in geology helped her quickly realize how special Sawmill Sink was.

One of the first blue hole fossils Albury saw was a tortoise that turned out to be of an unknown species, Chelonoidis alburyorum, that's now extinct.

It's pretty clear how their remains ended up in the blue hole. "If something like a tortoise fell in, it would be a one-way trip," Steadman said.

The hole's vertical walls would be impossible for the animal to climb out of.

The experts dated the crocodile and tortoise fossils to between 1,000 and 5,000 years old, after the sinkhole flooded.

Below these fossils were more bones that showed Abaco's rich wildlife before it sank beneath the sea.

The fossils show the island’s past boasted huge biodiversity.
A bird skull and another fossilized bird bone on a white background
Bird fossils found in Sawmill Sink on Abaco Island.

Kristen Grace/Florida Museum

Back when sea levels were lower thousands of years ago, Sawmill Sink was a dry, cave-like sinkhole where a rich, diverse collection of animals lived from roosting barn owls to crocodiles.

Many of these animals were present as far back as 15,000 years ago. With the fossils, the scientists could see which animals adapted to the climate shifts during the Ice Age.

Many species couldn’t survive one deadly predator: humans.
A hutia / Cuban hutia, a rodent-like animal, in a tree
Hutias were likely a food source for Abaco's early human residents.

Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Many of the blue hole's fossilized animals are now extinct on the island.

As scientists sifted through the bones from the sinkhole, they started to find patterns in when the animals disappeared.

They learned that 17 bird species didn't survive the rising sea levels 10,000 years ago.

But other bird species, along with reptiles and mammals did survive until about 1,000 years ago when humans landed on the island and wiped them out.

The Lucayan people, part of the Taíno culture, may have arrived on Great Abaco from Hispaniola and Jamaica as early as 720 CE.

Archaeological evidence suggests that these new residents ate the large tortoises that lived on the land.

The hutia, a rodent similar to the capybara but smaller, was another common food source. Like the tortoise, it disappeared from Abaco.

Even animals that humans may not have eaten were affected by their presence.

One species of bird, the Bahaman caracara, went extinct, probably because its diet was similar to the humans' and there was too much competition. Additionally, some bats died out when residents started clearing their habitats.

'Very smart' crocodiles may have stalked humans, who killed them in return.
A Cuban crocodile on the bank near water
Cuban crocodiles are aggressive and spend a lot of time on land.

Adalberto Roque/AFP via Getty Images

At the same time, humans might not have been at the top of the island's food chain.

"The crocodiles, we know, were stalking the tortoises," Albury said, "possibly the humans as well."

This species, the Cuban crocodile, is now critically endangered, with only a small population left in Cuba.

"They're very aggressive, very smart crocodiles," Albury said. Unlike some species, they live in freshwater and hunt on land.

"It would've made it a pretty interesting place in The Bahamas at one time," Albury said.

Eventually, the crocodiles disappeared from the island. The Lacayan people did, too, after Christopher Columbus mistakenly found his way to The Bahamas.

The fossils found a home in a new natural history museum.
Three women stand in a natural history museum behind glass cases
Nancy Albury created a natural history museum to house many of the fossils from Sawmill Sink.

Nancy Albury

For years, Albury, Steadman, Kakuk, and others were involved in a long campaign to turn Abaco Island's blue holes into an underwater national park.

Development and pollution threatened the sinkholes, which had remained undisturbed for so long.

The goal was two-fold: to keep the blue holes' environment stable to preserve the fossils and keep the source of freshwater pristine, Steadman said.

Albury started curating a branch of the National Museum of The Bahamas/Antiquities, Monuments and Museum Corporation on Abacao to help store the group's growing collection of fossils.

The museum opened in January 2018, with exhibits on the blue holes, the island's wildlife, and the Lacayan people.

By September 2019, the museum was completely destroyed.

Hurricane Dorian devastated Abaco.
Two people recovering objects from a natural history museum destroyed by a hurricane
Steadman and Albury salvaged what they could from the leveled museum.

Nancy Albury

In early September 2019, Hurricane Dorian stalled over The Bahamas, killing dozens of people and destroying thousands of homes.

It was one of the strongest hurricanes ever recorded in the Atlantic.

"Our house blew up with us in it," Albury said. "Literally, the roof exploded with us sitting there."

The museum she had spent years curating was destroyed, too. Walls had toppled, and water had flooded the museum and Albury's lab.

"It was the first and only natural history museum in The Bahamas, and two years later it was gone, just destroyed," she said.

After the hurricane, the museum’s collection was underwater.
Two people put together a broken tortoise shell
Steadman and Albury used the museum's records to see what was missing or destroyed during the hurricane.

Nancy Albury

About a week after the storm, Steadman came to the island to help Albury and Kakuk assess what remained of the museum's collection.

"We scraped up and collected all that we could collect," Albury said.

"It was still really hot and wet and stormy," Steadman said — not exactly an ideal environment for fragile fossils.

"All day long you're dealing with trying to recover the collections, and then in the evening, you're just trying to live and get by and figure out what you're going to do next," Albury said.

There was no running water or electricity. Albury had lost her home, her clothing, and any place to cook or store food and water.

Fortunately, she found her catalog of the collection, which she'd stored in plastic bags and boxes. Most of her electronic backups were destroyed, but a company managed to recover her photographs of the fossils from a water-logged hard drive.

These records helped them figure out what they still had and what was missing. Amazingly, much of the collection survived, between 80% and 90%, according to Albury's estimates.

Steadman packed up bins of fossils and took them to the University of Florida's climate-controlled storage.

The blue holes' future is in limbo.
A diver in an underwater cave with rocky formations
Kakuk continues to dive but no longer looks for fossils in Sawmill Sink.

Brian Kakuk

In the five years since Hurricane Dorian, the island's infrastructure has taken a long time to recover.

Albury and her husband have only recently finished rebuilding their marina business, but she has no plans to reopen the museum.

"I'm approaching 70 in a couple of months, and I am tired," she said.

Neither she nor Kakuk dives at Sawmill Sink anymore. Plans to turn the blue holes into a national park, too, have stalled.

"People have bigger fish to fry, just surviving and getting their lives back together," Steadman said, though he's hopeful that as conditions improve on Abaco the government will start looking into the proposal again.

And there's plenty more to be found in the blue holes. "Each little piece tells you more of the story," Albury said.

She thinks the research should continue, even though she and Steadman are both retired.

"It was a great story, and it still is, and there's still more to be told about it, I think," she said.

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Then and Now: The cast of 'School of Rock' 21 years later

The cast of "School of Rock" including Jack Black pose together in 2023
Jack Black and fellow cast members at the premiere of "School of Rock" in 2003.

Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

  • The hit musical-comedy "School of Rock" (2003) came to theaters over 20 years ago.
  • Jack Black, Joan Cusack, and Sarah Silverman had strong careers before and after the film. 
  • Miranda Cosgrove made a name for herself on TV, but many of the young actors left Hollywood. 

"School of Rock" hit theaters in October 2003. The movie starred Jack Black as a struggling musician who impersonates his friend to get a gig as a substitute teacher at a prestigious prep school and enlists a class of fourth-graders to perform at a local battle of the bands. 

Richard Linkletter directed the beloved film, which Andrew Lloyd Webber turned into a Broadway musical and which was adapted into a Nickelodeon TV show. Here's what the movie's stars have been up to the past two decades since its debut. 

Jack Black, who starred as Dewey Finn, is still a successful actor and musician.
A side-by-side image of Jack Black in 2004 and 2023
Jack Black in 2004 and 2023.

Dave Hogan/Getty Image 2004 ; Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images 2023

Prior to rocking out and pretending to be Mr. Schneebly in "School of Rock," Jack Black already had an impressive career.

He'd been acting since 1984 and was known for films like "The Cable Guy" (1996), "High Fidelity" (2000), "Orange County" (2002), and "Ice Age" (2002).

The actor also starred on HBO's "Tenacious D," which chronicled a fictionalized version of his rock duo with Kyle Gass.

After "School of Rock," Black went on to star in major films like "King Kong" (2005), "Nacho Libre" (2006), "Tenacious D and the Pick of Destiny" (2006), "The Holiday" (2006), "Tropic Thunder" (2008), the "Kung Fu Panda" franchise, and the "Jumanji" reboots.

He's also made several TV appearances on shows like Fox's "The Simpsons," Nickelodeon's "iCarly," and HBO's "The Brink." 

Outside of acting, Black and Gass have released several Tenacious D albums and videos. The duo recently suspended their 2024 tour after Gass joked about an attempted assassination of Donald Trump.

In 2023 alone, Black appeared in Hulu's "History of the World: Part II," "The Super Mario Bros. Movie," and Disney+'s "The Mandalorian." 

In March, Black told Ireland's JOE he'd love to work on a "School of Rock" sequel but said that the original screenplay's writer, Mike White, might be too busy with his huge hit "The White Lotus."

Miranda Cosgrove has starred in various hit movies and on TV shows since she played Summer.
A side-by-side image of Miranda Cosgrove in 2003 and 2023
Miranda Cosgrove in 2003 and 2023.

George Pimentel/WireImage via Getty Images ; Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Miranda Cosgrove played the precocious band manager Summer Hathaway in "School of Rock."

Her only acting credit before the film was a brief appearance on The WB's "Smallville."

After the movie, Cosgrove landed a leading role on Nickelodeon's "Drake and Josh" before starring on the network's "iCarly." 

She's also worked on movies like "Yours, Mine and Ours" (2005), the "Despicable Me" franchise, "3022" (2019), and "North Hollywood" (2021). 

Cosgrove has released albums and singles in between acting roles as well. 

The actor reprised her starring role in the recently canceled Paramount+ "iCarly" revival series and was a lead alongside Brooke Shields and Benjamin Bratt in Netflix's "Mother of the Bride" (2024).

"School of Rock" was Joey Gaydos Jr.'s only acting credit.
A side-by-side image of Joey Gaydos Jr. in 2004 an 2015
Joey Gaydos Jr. in 2004 an 2015.

Jun Sato/WireImage via Getty Images ; Jenny Anderson/Getty Images

Joey Gaydos Jr. played Zack Mooneyham, a shy student who's coaxed out of his shell to play guitar for the band. 

This was his only acting role. He went on to release a self-titled rock album in 2004.

He has also had a few legal troubles over the years. 

In 2009, Gaydos was arrested on a charge of driving under the influence at 17 years old. In 2019, he was arrested after he was accused of stealing several guitars in the state of Florida, authorities said at the time. 

He still makes music and released a few EPs in 2020, including "Dogtopia" and "Calm Weather." He regularly posts videos of himself playing guitar on Instagram.

Robert Tsai left the spotlight to focus on his education and musical talent.
A side-by-side image of Robert Tsai in 2003 and 2015
Robert Tsai in 2003 and 2015

George Pimentel/WireImage via Getty Images ; Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Robert Tsai played Lawrence, the band's demure yet talented pianist.

"School of Rock" was Tsai's only acting credit.

After the film, he went on to study at Dartmouth College where he continued performing as a pianist.

Rivkah Reyes is working as a performer, writer, and musician today.
A side-by-side image of Rivkah Reyes in 2004 and 2023
Rivkah Reyes in 2004 and 2023.

Jun Sato/WireImage via Getty Images ; Michael Tullberg/Getty Images

Rivkah Reyes' first acting role was as bassist Katie in the film. They landed the role after playing classical bass on an episode of NPR's "From the Top."

Since "School of Rock," the actor has been open about experiencing the negative effects of child stardom. In a 2020 Medium article, they wrote about developing an eating disorder; turning to drugs, alcohol, sex, and self-harm; and attempting suicide. 

They said they entered recovery for alcoholism and addiction in 2018. 

After taking a hiatus from acting, Reyes moved to LA and started working for a skincare company while performing gigs. They also traveled as a stand-up comedian and competed on NBC's "Bring the Funny."

The actor went on to appear in several movies, including "Bad Animal" (2021), Lifetime's "A Picture Perfect Holiday" (2021), and "A Holiday I Do" (2023).

In recent years, Reyes hosted a podcast where they interviewed former child stars, gained a following on TikTok, and performed live play readings with Acting for a Cause.

Their latest acting credit was an episode of the OUTtv series "Off Shoot"  (2024). Reyes also continues to perform music and recently released a single titled "another vice."

Kevin Clark, who played Freddy, left Hollywood to pursue music full time.
A side-by-side image of Kevin Clark in 2003 and 2015
Kevin Clark in 2013 and 2015.

George Pimentel/WireImage via Getty Images ; Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Kevin Clark played Freddy Jones, a rebellious student who played drums for the band. 

"School of Rock" was Clark's only acting credit. 

After filming the movie, he pursued a full-time music career and drummed for Chicago-based bands Dreadwolf and Jess Bess and the Intentions

He also taught students at a local "School of Rock" location, The Chicago Sun-Times reported.

In 2021, Clark died at 32 after a driver hit him while he was riding his bike.

Costar Reyes recalled that Clark suggested the film's ending, with the band losing the contest but winning over the audience and getting to play an encore.  

Aleisha Allen worked on a few more films after "School of Rock" before changing careers.
A side-by-side image of Aleisha Allen in 2003 and 2015
Aleisha Allen in 2003 and 2015.

Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images ; Jenny Anderson/Getty Images

Aleisha Allen played Alicia, one of the band's singers.

Before lending her vocals for the film, the actor voiced Sidetable Drawer on Nick Jr.'s "Blue's Clues." She also appeared in "The Best Man" (1999). 

After "School of Rock," Allen starred alongside Ice Cube in the family comedies "Are We There Yet" (2005) and "Are We Done Yet" (2007), and she appeared in "Young Adult" (2011).

Her last acting credit on IMDb is "You're Nobody 'til Somebody Kills You" (2012).

In a shift from her acting career, Allen attended Pace University and Columbia University, and she's now a speech-language pathologist.

Maryam Hassan, who played Tomika, has been working as an independent singer.
A side-by-side image of Maryam Hassan in 2004 and 2015
Maryam Hassan in 2004 and in 2015.

Dave Benett/Getty Images ; Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Maryam Hassan played Tomika, another one of the band's singers who surprised everyone with her powerful voice. 

Like many of the young stars, "School of Rock" was her only acting role. 

Since then, she's been working as a singer under the name Mayhrenate. Her latest song, from 2022, is called "Feel a Way."

In 2021, Hassan told Vulture that over a dozen members of the cast remained close.

"We have a group chat," she said. "We keep in touch pretty frequently and drop in our projects. I drop my music in, Miranda drops her acting projects in, stuff like that. Others have left the industry and talk about their families."

Caitlin Hale, who played Marta, went on to work in the medical field.
A side-by-side image of Caitlin Hale in 2003 and 2015
Caitlin Hale in 2003 and 2015.

Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage via Getty Images ; Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Caitlin Hale played Marta, the band's third singer. 

Hale voiced a character on two episodes of "Blue's Clues" before joining "School of Rock."

After the film, she left Hollywood and became a registered diagnostic medical sonographer and an OB-GYN ultrasound technologist.

Hale is also currently dating her "School of Rock" costar Angelo Massagli.

Brian Falduto became a singer-songwriter and certified life coach.
A side-by-side of Brian Falduto in 2003 and 2024
Brian Falduto in 2003 and 2024.

Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage via Getty Images ; Noam Galai/Getty Images

Brian Falduto played Billy, the fashion-forward costume designer for the band. 

"School of Rock" is one of the young actor's only credits on IMDb. After the role, Falduto said he was in denial about his sexuality. "I didn't come out until my senior year of college," he said on the "Cooper and Anthony Radio Show" in 2021.

He pursued degrees in theatre performance and arts administration at Wagner College before landing a number of off-Broadway and regional theater roles. 

He also launched a career as a country musician, releasing an EP in 2017 and an album in 2018. His most recent single, "Same Old Country Love Song," came out in 2023. Earlier this year, he covered Dolly Parton's "Why'd You Come Here Lookin' Like That." 

Outside of performing, Falduto is a life coach, primarily for LGBTQ+ individuals. He launched a podcast, The Gay Men's Self-Help Book Club, and The Gay Men's Mindfulness Collective.

He was also the first guest on Reyes' "Where Are We Now" podcast in 2021.

Cole Hawkins worked as a child actor but has since left the industry.
A side-by-side image of Cole Hawkins in 2003 and 2015
Cole Hawkins in 2003 and 2015

Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images ; Walter McBride/WireImage via Getty Images

Cole Hawkins played Leonard in the movie, one of the students in the class. 

Before "School of Rock," he appeared in "Big Daddy" (1999), "Meet the Parents" (2000), and "Kate and Leopold" (2001).

But he wasn't a musician. "The only thing that they had taught us to play in a New York City public school was a recorder, so I faked it," he told Rolling Stone in 2023.

Hawkins went on to appear in NBC's "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit," "The Naked Brothers Band: The Movie" (2005), and "The Water is Wide" (2006).

His last acting credit on IMDb was in 2006 on NBC's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent."

Angelo Massagli stopped acting a few years after "School of Rock."
A side-by-side image of Angelo Massagli in 2003 and 2013
Angelo Massagli in 2003 and 2013

Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage via Getty Images ; Rick Kern/Getty Images

Angelo Massagli played Frankie, another student in the class. 

Before "School of Rock," the young actor had a few film and TV credits, including CBS' "Cosby" and "Stuart Little 2" (2002). 

Between 2002 and 2007, he played Bobby Baccalieri Jr. on HBO's "The Sopranos." 

Massagli graduated from the University of Miami School of Law in 2019 and works as a music product counsel for TikTok, according to his LinkedIn page. He is dating his "School of Rock" costar, Hale.

Joan Cusack has worked steadily as an actress since playing Principal Mullins.
A side-by-side image of Joan Cusack in 2003 and in 2015
Joan Cusack at the 2003 "School of Rock" premiere and in 2015.

Jean-Paul Aussenard/WireImage via Getty Images ; Sonia Recchia/Getty Images for Sundance

Before filming "School of Rock," Joan Cusack was well known for blockbusters like  "Addams Family Values" (1993), "Grosse Pointe Blank" (1997), "Runaway Bride" (1999), and "Toy Story 2" (1999).

She also acted in "Working Girl" (1988) and "In and Out" (1997), both of which earned her Academy Award nominations for best supporting actress. 

On TV, Cusack had roles on NBC's "Saturday Night Live" and ABC's "What About Joan?" before joining the cast of "School of Rock."

After the movie, she continued to star in family films like "Ice Princess" (2005), "Chicken Little" (2005), "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl" (2008), the "Toy Story" sequels, and "Klaus" (2019). 

She also went on to roles in "Confessions of a Shopaholic" (2009), "My Sister's Keeper" (2009), "The Perks of Being a Wallflower" (2012), "Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping" (2016), and "Instant Family" (2018).

Cusack also continued her TV career on Showtime's "Shameless," Netflix's "A Series of Unfortunate Events," and, most recently, Amazon Prime's "Homecoming" in 2020.

Mike White, who played Ned, is a successful actor and writer.
A side-by-side image of Mike White in 2003 and 2023
Mike White in 2003 and 2023.

George Pimentel/WireImage via Getty Images ; Don Arnold/Getty Images

Mike White played Ned Schneebly, the friend and teacher that Dewey impersonates throughout the movie. He also wrote the film's screenplay.

Prior to "School of Rock," he wrote and appeared in movies like "Chuck and Buck" (2000) and "Orange County" (2002). 

Since the film, White has been a writer for several movies, including "Nacho Libre" (2006), "Pitch Perfect 3" (2017), and "Despicable Me 4" (2024).

He's also written for several TV series throughout his career, such as The WB's "Dawson's Creek," NBC's "Freaks and Geeks," HBO's "Enlightened" (which he also acted in), and Nickelodeon's "School of Rock" series. 

White recently won several Emmy Awards for his HBO series "The White Lotus."

Sarah Silverman is an accomplished comedian with over 100 performing credits to her name.
A side-by-side image of Sarah Silverman in 2003 and 2024
Sarah Silverman in 2003 and 2024.

George Pimentel/WireImage via Getty Images ; Amy Sussman/Getty Images

Sarah Silverman played Patty Di Marco, Ned's responsible girlfriend. 

The comedic actor got her start writing and performing on "Saturday Night Live" in the 1990s before landing roles in films like "There's Something About Mary" (1998), "The Bachelor" (1999), and "Heartbreakers" (2001).

After "School of Rock," Silverman continued to work on TV, starring on Comedy Central's "The Sarah Silverman Program" and voicing characters on Fox's "Bob's Burgers."

She also worked on "Rent" (2005), "The Muppets" (2011), "Wreck-It Ralph" (2012), "A Million Ways to Die in the West" (2014), "Battle of the Sexes" (2017), "Space Jam: A New Legacy" (2021), and "Marry Me" (2022). 

Most recently, she returned to her cartoon role in "The Bob's Burgers Movie" (2022), starred in "Menorah in the Middle" (2022), and appeared in the 2023 Leonard Bernstein biopic "Maestro." 

This story was originally published on May 22, 2021, and most recently updated on November 19, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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