Kofun: Japan's Keyhole-Shaped Burial Mounds

Oct 3, 2016

The landscape around Kansai, in southern-central Japan, especially around Osaka and Nara, is dotted by curious keyhole-shaped mounds surroun...

The Orange Rocks of Bay of Fires

Oct 1, 2016

The Bay of Fires, on the northeastern coast of Tasmania in Australia, is a large bay that extends for about 30 km from Binalong Bay in the s...

The Lost Villages of St. Lawrence

Oct 1, 2016

In 1954, the United States and Canada jointly embarked on a massive engineering project that involved the creation of a 600-km-long navigabl...

The Brown Dog Affair

Sep 29, 2016

In a secluded spot near the Old English Garden, in London’s Battersea Park, is a small bronze statue of a terrier. The statue was erected in...

Siq, Petra’s Spectacular Gorge

Sep 29, 2016

The ancient city of Petra, located in the heart of the mountainous desert of southern Jordan, had different approaches in the past. One poss...

London’s Deep Level Air Raid Shelters

Sep 28, 2016

When the Second World broke out in Europe, and London became the prime bombing target, people began to pour into the platforms of the London...

Colma, The Town of The Dead

Sep 27, 2016

South of San Francisco, near Daly City, lies the small town of Colma where the dead outnumbers the living by a thousand to one. It’s less th...

Jal Mahal: Jaipur’s Submerged Water Palace

Sep 26, 2016

Submerged in the waters of an artificial lake, in the “pink city” of Jaipur, in the state of Rajasthan, India, is the beautiful marbled pala...

Hess Triangle: The Smallest Piece of Private Property in New York City

Sep 24, 2016

At the southwest corner of Christopher Street and Seventh Avenue, in front of the entrance to the Village Cigars store, there's a small ...

The Restored Castle of Matrera

Sep 24, 2016

Restoring an ancient monument is a delicate business. Do you shore up an existing wall, or redo it completely in modern concrete? When the c...

The Historic Dutch Ship Batavia, And Its Blood-Curdling History

Sep 22, 2016

Moored at Bataviawerf, in Lelystad, in the Netherlands, is an authentic replica of a 17th-century ship named Batavia that once belonged to t...

Saudi Arabia’s Abandoned Hejaz Railway

Sep 20, 2016

The Hejaz railway that ran from Damascus to Medina, through the Hejaz region of Saudi Arabia, was one of the principal railroads of the Otto...

The Dee Wright Observatory And Viewing Tubes

Sep 20, 2016

Google Maps and GPS tracking apps are of great assistance when hiking in the wild, but they still fall short when it comes to identifying di...

A Mysterious Ice Cave That Produces Ice Only During Summer

Sep 19, 2016

About four miles east of Coudersport, in the town of Sweden, in Potter County, Pennsylvania, lies the most puzzling geological anomaly. It’s...

The Giant Eucalyptus of Australia

Sep 19, 2016

Most eucalyptus trees are moderately-sized but come to their native land, Australia, and you will be surprised at how tall these trees can g...

A Blast From The Past: Episode 26

Sep 18, 2016

From the archives of Amusing Planet. World’s Highest Tennis Court at Burj Al Arab The world’s highest tennis court stands atop the fourth ...

Kayakoy: A Greek Ghost Town in Turkey

Sep 16, 2016

Eight km to the south of Fethiye city in southwestern Turkey lies the ruins of around five hundred houses belonging to the once thriving com...

The Seven Noses of Soho

Sep 16, 2016

Attached to the walls of various buildings around the Soho neighborhood, in one of the inner boroughs of London, are several plaster casts o...

Japan’s Notorious Taiji Dolphin Hunt

Sep 14, 2016

One of the most infamous dolphin hunting season has begun on the small coastal town of Taiji, in southwestern Japan. Hundreds of dolphins ar...

Pobiti Kamani: The Stone Forest, Bulgaria

Sep 14, 2016

About 18 km to the west of Varna, Bulgaria, on the road to the capital of Sofia is a remarkable natural area called Pobiti Kamani or the Sto...