The Historic Bridge of Plaka

Oct 23, 2015

The Plaka Bridge, over Arachthos River, was the largest stone one-arch bridge in Greece and the Balkans, and the third largest one-arch ston...

A Butte Called Mollie’s Nipple

Oct 23, 2015

Mollie's Nipple (also spelled Mollies Nipple, without an apostrophe) is a basalt-capped hill that rises more than 1,300 feet above the s...

The Lithium Mine Fields of Atacama Desert

Oct 23, 2015

In the wastelands of Salar de Atacama, about 700 miles north of Santiago, is a huge lithium mine field operated by Sociedad Química y Minera...

There is Nothing in Arizona

Oct 21, 2015

In a bare stretch of US Highway 93, between mile markers 148 and 149, stands Nothing, a small abandoned “town” with literally nothing to see...

Monte Kaolino, An Artificial Sand Hill Popular For Sand Skiing

Oct 21, 2015

Monte Kaolino is a 120-meters tall sand dune located in the outskirts of the city of Hirschau, in southeast Germany. It consists of approxim...

Alaska’s Giant Vegetables

Oct 21, 2015

The Alaska State Fair held annually in Palmer, 42 miles northeast of Anchorage, is not your regular agricultural show. Here farmers from the...

Prague’s Narrowest Street is So Narrow it Has Traffic Lights For Pedestrians

Oct 20, 2015

In the heart of Prague’s oldest neighborhood, the historic Mala Strana or “Little Quarter”, there is a street so narrow that it’s impossible...

Warm Blooded Plants

Oct 20, 2015

Between late February and May, in woodlands and wetlands throughout eastern Canada and the northeast United States, you’ll find a low growin...

The Tree of Life in Kalaloch, Washington

Oct 20, 2015

There is an extraordinary tree in Kalaloch beach, within Olympic National Park in Washington, that some people call “the tree of life” becau...

Eisinga Planetarium: The World’s Oldest Working Planetarium

Oct 19, 2015

The world’s oldest working planetarium is located in the living room of a small, two-story house in the city of Franeker, in the Netherlands...

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...