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Curious Minnesota
March 27, 2020
Despite Minnesota’s nickname, the Land of 10,000 Lakes actually has more than 14,000 lakes.

Your top questions about Minnesota lakes answered

If Minnesotans love one thing, it's their lakes. We did some research to answer your five most frequent questions about Minnesota's cherished bodies of water.
Curious Minnesota
March 20, 2020
The annual Pack the Park event at Target field attracts thousands of volunteers to prepare meals for Feed My Starving Children.

Why does Minnesota have one of highest rates of volunteering in the country?

Minnesotans penchant for helping others goes beyond "Minnesota Nice."
Coronavirus
March 18, 2020

Pandemic prep: Here's what you need to know

As the novel coronavirus spreads across the world, we asked readers what they want to know about the pandemic. Host Eric Roper talks with Pulitzer Prize-winning reporters Jeremy Olson and Glenn Howatt to answer your most pressing questions.
Curious Minnesota
March 14, 2020
KENSINGTON RUNESTONE - (1929 - 1948) ACME

What's the truth behind Minnesota's Kensington Runestone?

Af­ter Swed­ish im­mi­grant Olof Öhman said he un­earthed the rock on his farm in Kensington in 1898, it immediately became a subject of fascination.
Curious Minnesota
March 6, 2020
The number of electric vehicles registered in Minnesota has nearly tripled since 2017. In this photo, Tesla Model 3’s are assembled in California.

Why do electric-vehicle owners pay a surcharge in Minnesota?

Because EV owners aren't gas guzzlers, they don't pay state and federal gas taxes that help maintain roads and bridges. Yet they still use the state's crumbling road system.
Curious Minnesota
February 29, 2020
Minnie and Paul embrace in the Target Field outfield, celebrating the rivalry between the Twin Cities.

Why can't Minneapolis and St. Paul play nice?

It turns out Minneapolis and St. Paul's neighborly competition goes back more than a century.
Curious Minnesota
February 25, 2020
Julie Seydel, who offers child care in her Andover home, said she has discouraged others from doing the same in today’s climate.

Are Minnesota's day-care costs really the highest in the nation?

Policy experts agree that child care is expensive here. But averages can be misleading, they say, and Minnesota may not be the outlier so often portrayed.
Curious Minnesota
February 14, 2020
Bison at Blue Mounds State Park wallow in dust to keep cool and rid themselves of bugs on a hot summer day.

When did wild bison disappear from Minnesota?

Once on the verge of extinction, the American bison is no longer an endangered species. Minnesotans can now visit the iconic animal in three locations around the state
Curious Minnesota
February 10, 2020
A runner braves the cold in Minneapolis, jogging around Lake Calhoun during an extreme cold snap.

Does Minnesota really have the worst winters in the country?

The land of 10,000 (frozen) lakes has a nationwide reputation for brutal, relentless winters. But are they the worst in the United States?
Curious Minnesota
February 2, 2020
Judy Henderson waited for the Outback Bowl parade to begin last year before the Gophers played Auburn.

What does Ski-U-Mah mean and how do you pronounce it?

It's part of the popular fight song for the University of Minnesota, but many students and alumni don't know a whole lot about the history of the phrase.
Curious Minnesota
January 25, 2020
Minneapolis - U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone enthusiastically addresses the delegates to the state DFL convention from the floor of the Minneapolis Conve

Why is Minnesota's Democratic Party called the DFL?

"If you look at Minnesota's political history, a lot of people call us the 'Maverick State' just because we never were really Republican or Democrat," Brian Pease said.
Curious Minnesota
January 17, 2020
Raising the Midsommar pole at the American Swedish Institute

Is Minnesota actually more German than Scandinavian?

A reader wants to know: Why do Scandinavians get all the attention when there are more Minnesotans of German descent?
Curious Minnesota
January 16, 2020
Older than most historic buildings still standing in the Twin Cities, the 136-year-old Stone Arch Bridge bridge has long been Minneapolis' de facto we

Our new podcast will make you smarter in 15 minutes

Our new Curious Minnesota podcast answers your questions about "Minnesota Nice," the Stone Arch Bridge and beyond. Tell us what questions you want answered.
Curious Minnesota
January 10, 2020
Jennifer Schroeder, convicted of a nonviolent drug offense, will be on parole and banned from voting until she is 71.

Why are felons stripped of voting rights, and what other rights do they lose?

Minnesota passed disenfranchisement of felons with statehood in 1858, but the practice didn't become commonplace nationally until after the Civil War — when newly emancipated African-Americans gained the right to vote.
Curious Minnesota
January 7, 2020
Andrew Peterson in 1885, standing by the log cabin he first lived in on his farm in Waconia. In the background stands the later farmhouse that still e

How did Minnesota's early settlers make it through the dark, cold winters?

Early Minnesotans had to get creative to stay warm in frigid temperatures.
Curious Minnesota
December 27, 2019
Zipper merge vs. northern lights: Your top questions this year answered

Zipper merge vs. northern lights: Your top questions this year answered

Minnesotans had a lot of questions about one another – particularly about why everyone seems to hate Edina and zipper merging.
Curious Minnesota
December 20, 2019
Bayfield,WI;5/29/03:Seagulls feasts on the guts tossed from the boat. The clever seagulls followed the boat waiting for the guts thrown overboard from

Why do inland cities like St. Paul have so many seagulls?

In the Midway neighborhood of St. Paul — more than a thousand miles from any sea, more than a hundred miles from a Great Lake and a few miles from the Mississippi River — seagulls gather in large numbers.
Curious Minnesota
December 16, 2019

Podcast: What exactly is 'Minnesota Nice' anyway?

Tracing the roots of "Minnesota Nice" is difficult, partly because people don't agree on what the term means.
Curious Minnesota
December 13, 2019
Los Angeles traffic on the 105 freeway near the 405 interchange in Southern Calif. California and other states are suing the Trump Administration over

Why doesn't Minnesota require vehicle emissions tests any more?

In the 1990s, drivers had to pay to have vehicles tested for carbon monoxide and other pollutants before renewing license tabs. A reader wants to know why the program ended.
Curious Minnesota
December 6, 2019
Michelle Kennedy grabbed a pack of cigarettes behind the counter for a customer at Vernon BP gas station in Edina.

Minnesota takes in millions each year from tobacco, but where does the money go?

All rolled up, taxes on every tobacco product in the state since 1957 total $11.75 billion. A reader wants to know what happens to the money.
Curious Minnesota
November 27, 2019
Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan's daughter Siobhan Hellendrung presented Paul Kvistad, president of the Minnesota Turkey Growers Association, with a coloring

Why doesn't Minnesota's governor pardon the ceremonial turkey?

Iowa pardons a turkey. So does North Dakota. And President Trump pardoned two, named Bread and Butter. But Minnesota's ceremonial turkey is destined for a needy family's table.
Curious Minnesota
November 22, 2019
The White Bear Township water tower is seen from Bald Eagle Lake Recreation Area. BACKGROUND INFORMATION: Bald Eagle Lake Recreation Area, part of Bal

Why do we have water towers and what do they do?

Some cities — usually large ones — don't use water towers, but they are an unmistakable part of the Minnesota landscape. What do they do and why do we have so many of them?
Curious Minnesota
November 15, 2019
Players, coaches, doctors, trainers, communications staff and security roam the sidelines every game — about 300 people total.

Who are all those people hanging out on sidelines during Vikings games?

Accounting for the full perimeter of the field during a Vikings' home game, there are roughly 300 people with their feet on the turf. But who are they all?
Curious Minnesota
November 8, 2019
The Wild's Marcus Foligno threw a punch at New York Rangers' Brendan Lemieux during a game last March in St. Paul.

Why isn't it a crime to punch someone if you're playing pro hockey?

Players have been charged for NHL fights, including one notorious Minnesota incident in 1975, but those cases are the exception. Why aren't hockey fights considered assault?
Curious Minnesota
November 2, 2019
Great Northern Railway’s first Empire Builder is pictured on the Stone Arch Bridge crossing the Mississippi River, likely in the 1920s or 1930s.

Why does the Stone Arch Bridge cross the Mississippi at such an odd angle?

Older than most historic buildings still standing in the Twin Cities, the 136-year-old bridge has long been Minneapolis' de facto welcome mat. But why was it built the way it was, with such a long angle?

Curious Minnesota

Curious Minnesota, a Star Tribune community-driven reporting project, puts readers' inquiries at the center of our newsroom's reporting.