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Sugar Bones
Episode 761

Sugar Bones

At the 1815 Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon Bonaparte’s final battle, more than 10,000 men and as many horses were killed in a single day. Yet, archaeologists have found the physical remains of only 2 soldiers. How did so many bones up and vanish? In a new book, an international team of historians and archaeologists argues the bones were depleted by industrial-scale grave robbing. Why? Well, for sugar, of course. Jeff and Anthony dig into this mystery and learn a lot about how sugar get from farm to table, by way of bone char.

We Have Concerns

May 13, 202450m 34sExplicit

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Show Notes

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Link to this week's story: https://www.npr.org/2024/04/10/1243939166/lunchables-consumer-reports-school-lunch

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Topics

charsugarfoodprocesshumorwaterlooanthony carboninapoleonbonenewscomedybattlefarmfrenchjeff cannatastoryfrancewarlaughindustrialsciencefunny