『The Disaster Archive - History's Greatest Catastrophes and Tragedies explained in minutes』のカバーアート

The Disaster Archive - History's Greatest Catastrophes and Tragedies explained in minutes

The Disaster Archive - History's Greatest Catastrophes and Tragedies explained in minutes

著者: The Archive Network
無料で聴く

The Disaster Archive is part of The Archive Network by Jonkai Ventures, a collection of podcasts dedicated to the stories that shaped our world. This series tells the stories of history's greatest catastrophes — earthquakes, floods, fires, shipwrecks, industrial failures, and pandemics — and the human experience at the heart of each one.

From Pompeii and the Titanic to Chernobyl, Bhopal, and Krakatoa, each series follows one disaster across five episodes as a documentary-style narrative: the world before, the warnings ignored, the catastrophe itself, the reckoning that followed, and the legacy it left behind.

Support the podcast and access exclusive content on Patreon:

https://thearchivenetwork.com/support

Discover more at:

https://thedisasterarchive.com

https://thearchivenetwork.com

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

© Jonkai Ventures OÜ / The Archive Network
世界 社会科学 科学
エピソード
  • Pompeii Eruption - Part 1: Before ash, a city thrived beneath a sleeping threat
    2026/06/29
    Picture a city where every detail suggests permanence—streets busy with commerce, villas sparkling above the bay, and a mountain in the background so familiar, it fades into daily life. But what if the greatest danger comes from something no one even recognizes as a threat?The Bay of Naples was, in the first century, a jewel of the Roman world. Villas climbed the slopes above blue water. Market towns like Pompeii and Herculaneum thrived on trade, agriculture, and a culture of bathing and civic order. Every day brought the routines of commerce, gossip, and repair. The mountain to the north—Vesuvius—was just part of the scenery.Learn more at: https://thedisasterarchive.com/disaster/pompeii-eruption

    The Disaster Archive is part of The Archive Network by Jonkai Ventures, a collection of podcasts dedicated to exploring history's greatest disasters and the lessons they leave behind.

    Support the podcast and access exclusive content on Patreon:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com/support

    Discover more archives and stories:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com

    Explore this archive:

    https://thedisasterarchive.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    7 分
  • Pompeii Eruption - Part 2: Ambiguous signs, ignored alarms, and choices made in the dark
    2026/06/30
    The ground trembled. The air changed. But in Pompeii and Herculaneum, ordinary life kept going—because what counts as a warning if it looks and feels familiar? Sometimes, the most dangerous signals are the ones you’ve already learned to live with.The first signs of change did not come with panic. Instead, the region around Vesuvius felt tremors, subtle and sometimes sharp. According to Pliny the Younger’s later letter, even the sea shifted strangely. Modern scholars believe smaller earthquakes and disturbances marked the days and weeks before the eruption. But the people of Pompeii were used to mending walls and patching damage. The big earthquake of sixty-two CE had taught them to expect repair, not disaster.Learn more at: https://thedisasterarchive.com/disaster/pompeii-eruption

    The Disaster Archive is part of The Archive Network by Jonkai Ventures, a collection of podcasts dedicated to exploring history's greatest disasters and the lessons they leave behind.

    Support the podcast and access exclusive content on Patreon:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com/support

    Discover more archives and stories:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com

    Explore this archive:

    https://thedisasterarchive.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    5 分
  • Pompeii Eruption - Part 3: Hour by hour inside the eruption’s deadly darkness
    2026/07/01
    A sudden roar. The mountain’s top explodes, and day turns to darkness. In moments, Pompeii’s streets are pelted with ash and stone. Herculaneum faces a wave of fire and gas. The catastrophe is no longer invisible—it’s everywhere, and it’s unstoppable.When Vesuvius erupted on that August day, it did so with force that defied imagination. Pliny the Younger, writing from Misenum, compared the rising cloud to a pine tree—thick, towering, and branching at the top. Volcanologists now recognize this as the classic Plinian eruption column, blasting pumice, ash, and toxic gases high into the sky.Learn more at: https://thedisasterarchive.com/disaster/pompeii-eruption

    The Disaster Archive is part of The Archive Network by Jonkai Ventures, a collection of podcasts dedicated to exploring history's greatest disasters and the lessons they leave behind.

    Support the podcast and access exclusive content on Patreon:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com/support

    Discover more archives and stories:

    https://thearchivenetwork.com

    Explore this archive:

    https://thedisasterarchive.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    7 分
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません