『Duke Podcast Show』のカバーアート

Duke Podcast Show

Duke Podcast Show

著者: Duke Teynor
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Songs that tamed the West and continue to shape our country today. Words of history and the life of a Cowboy tales through songs and folk tales. Story of Western history that shaped the Wild West.Duke Teynor 音楽
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  • Gold in the Appalachians: The Piedmont’s Forgotten Treasure
    2025/09/15

    Most people think America's first gold rush happened in California, but there's a $400,000 doorstop from 1799 that tells a completely different story.

    That incredible discovery in North Carolina where a 12-year-old found a 17-pound gold nugget that his family just casually used to prop open their door.

    And that accidental discovery launched America's first gold rush decades before anyone had even heard of Sutter's Mill. The impact was so massive that the U.S. government established entire Mint branches in Charlotte and Dahlonega just to handle the flow of gold.

    The geological story behind this is fascinating too. The entire Piedmont region, stretching from Alabama to Maryland, was essentially created through massive tectonic forces millions of years ago.

    And those forces created what geologists call orogenic gold deposits - basically, gold trapped in fault lines and metamorphic rock zones. Over time, erosion carried tiny pieces into streams and creeks, creating these natural gold deposits that people could actually pan for.

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    5 分
  • Liquid Gold of the Mediterranean
    2025/09/14

    The story of olive oil begins thousands of years ago in the Mediterranean— places like Greece, Italy, and the Middle East. The olive tree itself is asymbol of peace and endurance, and its oil was once used for more than justcooking. In ancient times, olive oil lit lamps, anointed kings, and played acentral role in trade and religion.

    As civilizations spread, so did the olive tree, making its way acrossEurope and eventually into the New World. Today, olives are grown not just inthe Mediterranean, but in California, South America, and even parts ofAustralia.

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    6 分
  • The Ancient Grain that is coming back to feed us
    2025/09/13

    Sorghum traces its roots back to Africa, where it was first cultivated over5,000 years ago. It spread across the Middle East and Asia, eventually finding its way to theAmericas. Here in the South, sorghum became a staple — grown for both grain andsyrup, often called “sorghum molasses.”

    This isn’t just any old grain. Sorghum is resilient. It thrives in hot,dry climates where other crops struggle, making it one of the most sustainablegrains we can grow today.

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    5 分
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