On March 29, 1881, snowdrifts in Minnesota were higher than locomotive @facethenation
Oscar Robertson of the Cincinnati Bearcats pulls in the rebound against the Kansas State University Wildcats, 1958 @facethenation
Crowds enjoying the outdoors at the beach in Seabreeze, Daytona in 1904 @facethenation
One of the first pictures ever taken of the Sun. Leon Foucault and Louis Fizeau, April 2, 1845.
More than 170 years ago, their seemingly simple black and white photo was remarkable for depicting our sun not as an overwhelming, ungraspable celestial body, but as another star in the sky. Visible on its surface are sunspots - areas of intense magnetic activity that are also impossible to see with the naked eye.
@facethenation
More than 170 years ago, their seemingly simple black and white photo was remarkable for depicting our sun not as an overwhelming, ungraspable celestial body, but as another star in the sky. Visible on its surface are sunspots - areas of intense magnetic activity that are also impossible to see with the naked eye.
@facethenation
Sunlight streams through the windows in the concourse at Grand Central Terminal in New York City in 1954 @facethenation
A U.S. Marine demolition team blasting a Japanese cave during the Battle of Iwo Jima on April 2, 1945 @facethenation
Hello there! 👋 A steel worker balances on a girder during the construction of the Empire State Building in New York, 1931 😱 @facethenation
🚀 On April 4, 1968, an unmanned rocket blasted off from Florida. Apollo 6 was the last unmanned test flight in the Apollo Space Program @facethenation
Apollo 6 - Launched this day 50 Years ago... Explore a collection of Apollo photos http://telegra.ph/Apollo-6-Last-of-the-unmanned-launches-04-04
Telegraph
Apollo 6. Last of the unmanned launches 🚀
Launched on April 4, 1968, Apollo 6 was the last unmanned test flight in the Apollo Space Program. The mission lasted for about 10 hours and despite the malfunctions, it proved to NASA that a manned spaceflight is a possibility.