Lahaina Noon: When Shadows Disappear

Apr 11, 2017

Notice anything odd about this picture? The sun is out as you can tell by the shadows under the cars and on the walls. But why aren’t the ye...

Venta Rapid: Europe’s Widest Waterfalls

Apr 10, 2017

At just 2 meters tall, the Venta Rapid, or Ventas Rumba in Latvian, is one of the smallest waterfalls in the world. But its low height is co...

Inuit Tactile Maps of Greenland

Apr 10, 2017

Like everybody else, the Inuit people of Greenland have been making maps to navigate the rugged coastline, but unlike maps made on paper, th...

Colletta di Castelbianco: A Modern Stone Village

Apr 7, 2017

Up on the steep hillside of the Maritime Alps near the Italian Riviera, halfway between Genoa and Nice, lies the ancient medieval village of...

Mark Twain’s Study at Elmira College

Apr 7, 2017

On the campus of Elmira College in upstate New York sits a small octagonal wooden cabin with a writing desk and chair, a brick fireplace and...

The World’s Quietest Train Stations

Apr 5, 2017

Some of the world’s busiest train stations are located in Japan. Indeed, as per statistics that surfaced in 2013, out of the top 51 train st...

The Japanese Hotel Staffed By Robots

Apr 5, 2017

In the last few weeks, we have been hearing a lot about how robots have been replacing human workers across industries in developed countrie...

The Fluorescent Rocks of Sterling Hill Mining Museum

Apr 1, 2017

The Sterling Hill Mining Museum in New Jersey, United States, is known for its variety of immersive and educational exhibits, but is best kn...

Karaba Brick Quarry of Burkina Faso

Apr 1, 2017

Bricks are usually molded from clay, but in Karaba, a small African village in southwestern Burkina Faso, bricks are quarried out of the hil...

The Festival of Exploding Sledgehammers

Apr 1, 2017

Every February, residents of the tiny town of San Juan de la Vega in Mexico perform the re-enactment of a four hundred year-old battle that ...