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Featured Article: Wilhelm von Humboldt

Félicien Rops, Pornokratès, 1878
Friedrich Wilhelm Christian Karl Ferdinand, or Baron von Humboldt (June 22, 1767 – April 8, 1835), was a government official, diplomat, philosopher, linguist, and educational reformer, famous for introducing knowledge of the Basque language to European intelligentsia. His view that language expresses the culture of the speaker and is a determinant in our perception of the world was developed much later into the field of ethnolinguistics. He was the founder of Humboldt Universität in Berlin, and made significant contributions to the educational system in Prussia and, through its influence, to the world.

Popular Article: Triassic

A map of Earth as it appeared during the Norian age of the Late Triassic
The Triassic period is an interval of about 51 million years, spanning roughly from 251 to 200 million years ago (mya). The period is noteworthy for a great increase in the biodiversity of both marine and continental life. Corals of the hexacorallia group make their first appearance. The first flowering plants (Angiosperms) may have evolved during the Triassic, as did the first flying vertebrates, the pterosaurs.

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Christmas Island was uninhabited until the late nineteenth century and so has many unique species of fauna and flora that evolved independently of human interference (source: Christmas Island)