A Blast From The Past: Episode 10

Feb 28, 2016

A collection of interesting articles that you may have missed, pulled out from Amusing Planet’s past archives. Giant Crystal Cave in the Me...

The Stick Chart Navigation of Marshall Islands

Feb 27, 2016

The Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean was settled by the Micronesians more than three thousand years ago. These early settlers had to ma...

Vertical Earth Kilometer

Feb 26, 2016

In Friedrichsplatz Park in Kassel, Germany, there is a public art installation of epic scale, but you can’t see it. The only visible sign of...

The Stunning Beauty of Braided Rivers

Feb 26, 2016

Most rivers flow in one broad channel of water, but some rivers split into lots of small channels that continually split and join each other...

The Norway Spiral

Feb 25, 2016

On December 9, 2009, a curious spiral of blue and white light appeared in the night sky over northern Norway and Sweden, freaking out a sect...

Highbury Square: A 93-Year-Old Football Stadium Converted Into Apartments

Feb 25, 2016

For any die-hard Gooner with half-a-million pound to spare, what’s better than buying a property at the old Arsenal Stadium in Highbury, Nor...

The Urban Villages of China

Feb 25, 2016

Over the last four decades, China has experienced rapid urban growth and massive rural to urban migration. Between the late seventies to the...

Collaborating With Insects to Make Art

Feb 24, 2016

Some of the most hated creatures on earth are bugs. These small scurry things invade our home and private spaces, spoil our food, get into o...

The Old Mill of Vernon

Feb 23, 2016

The Old Mill (Le Vieux-Moulin, in French) in the commune of Vernon, in northern France, is a 16th century flour mill constructed on top of a...

The Pigment Library at Harvard

Feb 23, 2016

A piece of rare lapis lazuli stone from quarries in Afghanistan, secretions from on ocean-dwelling snail Bolinus brandaris , dried bodies of...

The Boiling River of Mayantuyacu, Peru

Feb 20, 2016

Deep in the Amazon rainforest, in Mayantuyacu, Peru, flows a river so hot its water actually boils. The locals call it “Shanay-timpishka” wh...

The Forgotten Desert Libraries of Chinguetti

Feb 19, 2016

The ancient desert town of Chinguetti, in Mauritania, on the western edge of the Sahara, has changed little since it was founded more than t...

Diana Beltran Herrera’s Realistic Paper Birds

Feb 19, 2016

These stunning paper birds were created by Columbian artist Diana Beltran Herrera using nothing but a few colored papers, glue and a pair o...

Fantasy Canyon, Utah

Feb 19, 2016

Fantasy Canyon is located about 25 miles south of Vernal, in northeastern Utah, United States. This small area, which is not really a canyon...

Lake Pontchartrain Causeway, And its Claim to ‘The World’s Longest Bridge’ Title

Feb 18, 2016

If you look at the list of the longest bridges in the world , you will notice that the top positions are dominated by Asian countries, espec...

Brent Christensen’s Amazing Ice Castles

Feb 18, 2016

Brent Christensen is the founder of Ice Castles , an Utah-based company specializing in creating lofty ice castles by carefully orchestratin...

Artist Creates Large GPS Doodles by Cycling Around City

Feb 17, 2016

When Canadian artist and fitness junkie Stephen Lund began tracking his cycling routes using GPS, he saw a potential to be creative with the...

The Staircase of The King of Aragon

Feb 17, 2016

The Staircase of The King of Aragon (Escalier du Roi d’Aragon, in French) is a stony staircase carved into the vertical side of a limestone ...

The Strange Rocks of Vottovaara

Feb 17, 2016

Twenty km south-east of the village of Sukkajärvi, in the west Karelia hills of the Karelia region of Russia, is the mountain of Vottovaara....

The Abandoned Giant Busts of Presidents Park

Feb 16, 2016

The iconic heads of four US Presidents sculpted on the granite face of Mount Rushmore, in the Black Hills in South Dakota, has marveled mill...