The Four Corners Monument

Dec 19, 2014

The Four Corners Monument is the only place in the United States where you can be in four different states at the same time -Arizona, Colora...

The Prime Meridian At The Royal Observatory, Greenwich

Dec 18, 2014

The Prime Meridian, also known as the Greenwich Meridian, passes through longitude 0° 0' 0'' and on its journey from pole to pol...

Hydrospeeding on The Aletsch Glacier

Dec 18, 2014

Hydrospeeding or riverboarding is a form of extreme sports where participants lie prone on rigid foam boards and ride the rapids. Riverboard...

Longmen Grottoes, China

Dec 17, 2014

Longmen Grottoes are a series of Buddhist cave temples carved into the rock on the banks of the Yi River, south of the city of Luoyang, in H...

The 1,800-Km-Long Hand-Dug Grand Canal of China

Dec 17, 2014

The Grand Canal is a series of waterways in eastern and northern China starting at Beijing and ending at the city of Hangzhou in Zhejiang pr...

Tollund Man, The 2,400 Year Old Bog Body

Dec 16, 2014

Over the past few centuries, men harvesting peat in European bogs have discovered the preserved remains of hundreds of human corpses called ...

Y-40 Deep Joy: World's Deepest Swimming Pool

Dec 16, 2014

Y-40 “Deep Joy” is the world's deepest pool, at 42 meters deep, a height equivalent to that of a 14-storey building. The pool measures 2...

Bubble Gum Walls: America’s Stickiest Attractions

Dec 15, 2014

Chewing gum litter is a major problem in western countries. According to a study conducted in 2005, Americans chew, on average, 160-180 piec...

The Fishing Village of Al Max, Alexandria

Dec 15, 2014

Al Max (also spelled El Max) is one of the neighbourhoods of the city of Alexandria in Egypt, located in the Department of Amriya district i...

The Saar Loop at Mettlach

Dec 12, 2014

The Saar River rises in the Vosges mountains on the border of Alsace and Lorraine, in France, then flows northward through western Germany t...

Herodium: The Palace and Tomb of King Herod

Dec 10, 2014

Located 12 km south of Jerusalem, in the Judean desert, Herodium looks like an extinct volcano, but it really is a fort built by King Herod ...

Padrão dos Descobrimentos: The Discoveries Monument in Lisbon

Dec 10, 2014

The Portuguese were prolific explorers. Starting from the early 15th century, under the sponsorship of prince Henry the Navigator, several P...

The Peeing Statues of Brussels

Dec 9, 2014

One of the most iconic symbols of Brussels is not a majestic bridge or a tower or a cathedral, but a tiny statue of a little boy happily pis...

The Needles of Isle of Wight

Dec 8, 2014

The Needles is a row of three detached masses of chalk that rise out of the sea off the western extremity of the Isle of Wight, in UK, close...

Ebenezer Place, The Shortest Street in The World

Dec 7, 2014

“Blink and you’d miss Ebenezer Place,” writes Anne Ward, author of Nothing to See Here: A Guide to the Hidden Joys of Scotland , a guide boo...

Moulins on Glaciers

Dec 6, 2014

Just like rainwater dissolves the bedrock on the Earth’s crust and form sinkholes, meltwater on a glacier’s surface can melt ice and form si...

The Snow Monkeys of Jigokudani

Dec 6, 2014

Jigokudani is located in the valley of the Yokoyu River, in Nagano Prefecture, in Japan, at an elevation of 850 meters. Literally “hell’s va...

Cape Agulhas: The Place Where Two Oceans Meet

Dec 5, 2014

When Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias rounded the rocky headland of South Africa’s Cape Peninsula in 1488, he became the first European t...

The Iconic Gold Hill of Shaftesbury

Dec 3, 2014

Gold Hill, in the town of Shaftesbury in the English county of Dorset, is a picturesque steep cobbled street. The street was made famous by ...

Patrick Dougherty’s Twig Sculptures

Dec 3, 2014

North Carolina-based artist Patrick Dougherty has gained an international reputation for weaving tree saplings into massive, swirling forms...