Showing posts with the label Scotland

Crannogs: Neolithic-Era Artificial Islands

Jul 23, 2019

The Neolithic people of Great Britain were prolific builders. Just look at the British Isles—they are studded with countless ancient megalit...

The Cranes of River Clyde

May 10, 2019

A giant cantilever crane looms over a car park adjacent to the Hilton Garden Inn at Glasgow City. During its heydays, this crane used to lo...

Why Did Ancient People Bury Butter in Bogs?

Mar 19, 2019

Peat bogs are favorite hunting grounds of archeologists because of the many odd surprises these marshy wetlands have revealed from time to t...

The Biggest Little Railway in the World

Dec 17, 2018

Last year, a team of British railway enthusiasts got together to engineer the longest miniature railway journey in the world. The tracks tha...

The Tay Bridge Disaster And The World’s Worst Poem

Nov 14, 2018

On the night of 28 December 1879, a violent storm lashed across Scotland collapsing an iron bridge that straddled the Firth of Tay and plung...

The Miniature Coffins of Arthur’s Seat

Sep 5, 2018

At the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh are a set of eight miniature coffins carved in wood and decorated with tinned iron. Each cof...

Canary Girls: The World War One Women Who Turned Yellow

Aug 1, 2018

Munition workers in a shell warehouse at National Shell Filling Factory No.6, Chilwell, Nottinghamshire in 1917. Photo credit: Imperial War...

Demonstration of a Cantilever Bridge

Jul 25, 2018

A cantilever bridge is a bridge whose main elements are cantilevers—structures that are anchored at only one end while the other end floats ...

Tura Coo: The Cow That Led A Town To Riots

Jul 19, 2018

A hundred years ago, a small farming community called Turriff in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, became the unlikely stage for one of the most biza...

Britain’s User Worked Level Crossings

Jun 25, 2018

The United Kingdom has some 6,500 level crossings on their sprawling railway network, out of which an astounding number of them—5,000—are us...

Why Do Many Historic Buildings in The UK Have Bricked Up Windows?

Apr 16, 2018

There was a time in Great Britain when having windows in homes and buildings were prohibitively expensive. That time began in 1696 with the...

Wojtek: The Bear That Drank Beer And Went to War

Feb 28, 2018

Archibald Brown, the British official at the port of Naples, looked at the roster in his hand and called out the name—“Corporal Wojtek”, but...

Cultybraggan: Britain’s Last POW Camp

Dec 12, 2017

The Cultybraggan camp located near the Scottish village of Comrie, in Perthshire, is one of the last remaining World War 2 Prisoner of War C...

The Dark Legacy of Gruinard Island

Dec 8, 2017

Halfway between the villages of Gairloch and Ullapool in the North-West Highlands of Scotland, sits a small oval-shaped island named Gruinar...

The Udny Mort House

Nov 1, 2017

Much of what we know about the human anatomy comes from dissecting human cadavers. The practice goes back to classical antiquity. The Greeks...

Sheela-Na-Gig: The Mysterious Medieval Carvings of Women Exhibitionists

Oct 30, 2017

The Church of St Mary and St David at Kilpeck in the English county of Herefordshire is famous for its Norman carvings of writhing snakes an...

The Closes of Edinburgh

Aug 29, 2017

The Old Town of Edinburgh, Scotland, consisted originally of the main street, now known as the Royal Mile, and a large number of small alley...

The Unfinished National Monument of Scotland

Jun 26, 2017

High up on the summit of Carlton Hill in Edinburgh, Scotland, stands the country’s National Monument. But far from being the source of natio...

The Oil Rig Graveyard of Cromarty Firth

Jan 31, 2017

In a remote sheltered harbor guarded by two precipitous headlands, in the North of Scotland, dozens of oil rigs are sitting idle, some for m...

Gilmerton Cove of Edinburg

Dec 21, 2016

Just a few meters beneath the streets of Gilmerton, an ex-mining village on the southern edge of the city of Edinburgh, in Scotland, lies a ...