Saddam Hussein’s Unfinished Mosques

Dec 22, 2016

In the late 1990s, amidst rising poverty and with four million residents on the verge of famine, the former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein deci...

The Pout Of A Red-Lipped Batfish

Dec 22, 2016

Named after Charles Darwin, Ogcocephalus darwini, or the red-lipped batfish, is an unusual looking fish. It is a type of anglerfish, the sa...

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 ...

Citadelle Laferrière of Haiti

Dec 21, 2016

The Citadelle Laferrière, located on top of a mountain in northern Haiti, is one of the largest fortresses in the Americas. The Citadel was ...

Towers of Silence

Dec 20, 2016

The Zoroastrians have an unusual way of disposing off their dead. They neither bury them nor cremate them. Instead, corpses are left atop hi...

Belchite: The Ruins of The Spanish Civil War

Dec 20, 2016

Forty kilometer southeast of the city of Zaragoza, in north-eastern Spain, lies the ghost town of Belchite, that was destroyed in 1937 durin...

11 Foot 8 Inches: The Infamous ‘Can Opener’ Bridge

Dec 17, 2016

At 11 foot 8 inches, the Norfolk Southern–Gregson Street Overpass, located in Durham, North Carolina, United States, is a bit too short. The...

Nagoro: The Japanese Village of Dolls

Dec 16, 2016

The village of Nagoro on the south-western island of Shikoku, in Japan, was once home to hundreds of residents. But over the years, Nagoro’s...

Lycurgus Cup: A Piece of Ancient Roman Nanotechnology

Dec 16, 2016

In the 1950s, the British Museum came into possession an ancient glass chalice called the Lycurgus Cup, so named for its depiction of Dionys...

The Golden Fire Hydrant of San Francisco

Dec 14, 2016

After a massive earthquake rocked the city of San Francisco on April 18, 1906, fires erupted all around the city from ruptured gas lines, ov...