Post-modernity (1945 - 2016 C.E.)

Post-modernity spans 1945 to 2016 C.E., an era defined by rapid technological acceleration, decolonization, the rise of the internet, and expanding civil rights. This archive collects milestones in science, medicine, governance, and culture from those seven decades of sweeping human progress.

Wind turbine from below, for article on world's first wind farm

U.S. Windpower installs the world’s first wind farm in New Hampshire

The world’s first wind farm spun to life in late 1980 on a New Hampshire hillside, where 20 small turbines fed electricity directly into the grid. Blades broke, towers stood just 60 feet tall, and the project was quietly dismantled within a couple of years. But the proof held, and a direct line runs from those struggling machines to today’s global wind industry.

image for article on FSM constitution

Chuuk, Kosrae, Pohnpei, and Yap ratify the FSM constitution, forging a Pacific nation

The Federated States of Micronesia constitution took effect on May 10, 1979, binding four island groups — Chuuk, Kosrae, Pohnpei, and Yap — into a single federation across a million square miles of Pacific Ocean. Drafted by Micronesians themselves, it protected Indigenous land ownership and laid the groundwork for full sovereignty seven years later.

Tree frog, for article on yasuní national park

Ecuador formally establishes Yasuní National Park, protecting Earth’s most biodiverse patch of Amazon

Yasuní National Park was established in 1979, when Ecuador drew a boundary around roughly 10,000 square kilometers of Amazonian rainforest where the equator, Andes, and Amazon converge. A single hectare there holds more insect species than all of North America. The park remains home to the Huaorani and two uncontacted peoples who have lived there for generations.