Charles Jackson and his son Kevin were in their backyard when they spotted a beast which they say stood seven to eight feet tall.
In 1979, America's first space station, the 100-ton Skylab, came crashing back to Earth.
In July 1913, the temperature rose to 134° Fahrenheit in Death Valley, California.
Howard Hughes took one of the fastest planes ever built on a maiden flight that almost killed him.
The machine that Otto Rohwedder created not only sliced bread, but it also wrapped it.
Louis Réard sliced a bit off the design so that the belly button could be revealed. He advertised his alteration as "smaller than the world's smallest swimsuit."
While floating on an offshoot of the River Thames, Charles Dodgson (A.K.A Lewis Carroll) came up with an improvised tale that would one day morph into the classic book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
It was an excellent swimmer, but rather clumsy on land, which made it easy prey for eagles, polar bears and humans.
97 British troops were gunned down in cold blood after they surrendered to German forces.
A massive migration of frogs closed off a major Greek highway as "millions" of the amphibians massed on the roadway.
The sub plummeted 243 feet and slammed into the ocean floor.
Stranded in Jamaica and on the brink of starvation, Christopher Columbus hatched an ingenious plan.
This amazingly large leatherback measured 9 feet from snout to tail and he weighed over 2000 pounds.