Unexploded Bombs Find Everyday Use in Laos’ Villages

Oct 19, 2015

The Vietnam War ended 40 years ago, but left a deadly legacy, especially in Laos. The US military dropped more than 2 million tons of bombs ...

Randy Hage’s Miniature Models of New York City Storefronts

Oct 18, 2015

Randy Hage has been visiting New York twice a year since the late 90s, but he is not attracted by the city’s iconic buildings and tourist a...

Paris Plages: The Artificial Beaches of Paris

Oct 17, 2015

Every year since 2002, a section of the pedestrian bank along the river Seine, in the center of Paris, is transformed into a beach, in a pop...

The Granite Dells of Prescott, Arizona

Oct 17, 2015

Located outside the city of Prescott in the US state of Arizona, is a unique geological formation called Granite Dells, consisting of massiv...

The Ames Pyramid: A Monument to The Forgotten Brothers

Oct 17, 2015

Standing utterly alone in the windswept plateau of Albany County, Wyoming, a couple of miles off Interstate 80 and accessible only by a dirt...

The Abandoned Refrigerators of Katrina

Oct 16, 2015

Hurricane Katrina, that ravaged the Gulf Coast and the entire city of New Orleans in the summer of 2005, ruined a lot of household appliance...

Ailsa Craig And Its Curling Stones

Oct 15, 2015

Ailsa Craig is a small granite island in the Firth of Clyde, about 16 kilometers off the coast of Scotland. The island, also known as “Paddy...

America's Smallest "National Forest" in Adak

Oct 15, 2015

Adak Island, located near the furthest tip of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska, is one of the southernmost westernmost island of the United S...

Eric Pickersgill Removes Smartphones From Photos to Show Our Extreme Device Addiction

Oct 14, 2015

American photographer Eric Pickersgill’s new photo series titled “ Removed ” shows people in everyday life absorbed with their digital devic...

The Cement Mixer Space Capsule of Winganon

Oct 14, 2015

Along a lonely stretch of road between the small villages of Talala and Winganon in the US state of Oklahoma, lies what appears to be an aba...

Hangar One of Mountain View, California

Oct 13, 2015

One of the most recognizable landmarks of California's Silicon Valley is a huge steel-framed airship hangar, known as Hangar One, that s...

The Kerio Crater Lake in Iceland

Oct 13, 2015

The Kerio Crater Lake (sometimes spelled Kerid) is located in the Grímsnes area in south Iceland, and is one of the most photogenic volcanic...

The Bridge of Flowers in Shelburne Falls

Oct 13, 2015

The Bridge of Flowers is a flower laden bridge located in the village of Shelburne Falls in Massachusetts, USA. The 400-feet concrete bridge...

The Unusual Border of Märket Island

Oct 12, 2015

Märket is a small 3.3-hectare lump of rock located in the passage joining the Gulf of Bothnia to the Baltic Sea, between Sweden and Finland....

Hail Cannon: A Gun That Allegedly Controls Weather

Oct 12, 2015

Ever since men abandoned their nomadic life and started growing their own food, they have been trying to influence the weather. That simply ...

‘Trans Am Totem’ And ‘Spindle’: The Art of Stacking Cars

Oct 10, 2015

At a traffic median in the busy urban intersection of Quebec Street and Milross Avenue, near False Creek, in Vancouver, stands a 10-meters h...

The Tree That Owns Itself

Oct 10, 2015

At the intersection of Dearing Street and Finley Street, in a quiet residential neighborhood near downtown Athens, in the state of Georgia, ...

The Ninety Mile Beach, Australia

Oct 8, 2015

There are a lot of long and straight things in Australia: a 145-km stretch of road without a turning, a 478-km stretch of dead-straight rai...

Timgad: An Ancient Roman City With a Very Modern Grid Design

Oct 8, 2015

The ruins of Timgad lies on the slopes of the Aures Massif, about 35 km east of the town of Batna, in modern-day Algeria. Built nearly 2,000...

Bacterial Art on Petri Dishes

Oct 8, 2015

The American Society for Microbiology launched its first ever Agar Art contest, inviting microbiologists to unleash their hidden creative ge...