La Pascualita, The Corpse Bride

Jan 16, 2017

Peering out from behind the glass window of a small bridal shop in Chihuahua, Mexico, stands a tall, slender figure dressed in bridal costum...

The Second Life of Wind Turbine Blades

Jan 12, 2017

As the world pushes towards renewable energy, the wind energy industry comes to the forefront as a clean and a genuinely green energy. And l...

The Frankincense Trees of Wadi Dawkah

Jan 11, 2017

For more than 5,000 years, the Arabs have traded two highly prized fragrances —frankincense and myrrh— obtained from trees that grow exclusi...

Semaphore: The World’s First Telegraph

Jan 11, 2017

Smoke signals and beacons have been used to relay messages over short distances since ancient times, but the only reliable way to send messa...

Rosalia Lombardo: The Mummy That Blinks

Jan 10, 2017

Rosalia Lombardo was only two years old when she died from pneumonia in 1920. Her premature death left her father so heartbroken that he app...

The Museum of Bad Art

Jan 7, 2017

On rare occasions, a thrift store or a pawnshop can yield items of extreme value, but these are hardly the places you can expect to bump int...

London Necropolis Railway: The Train For The Dead

Jan 6, 2017

It was a difficult time to be alive in 1848 London, and worse still to be dead. A cholera epidemic had just swept through the city killing n...

The Anti-Communist Dwarves of Wroclaw

Jan 4, 2017

Scattered throughout the city of Wroclaw, Poland, are hundreds of small bronze statues of dwarves. They began appearing in the streets in 20...

Casey: The Small Town of Big Things

Jan 3, 2017

At just over two square miles and with less than 3,000 inhabitants, the town of Casey in Illinois might be among the smaller towns of the Un...

The World's Smallest Monuments

Jan 3, 2017

The Russian city of Tomsk is home to the smallest public monument in the world —a tiny bronze frog, sitting on top of a smooth rock. The scu...

Venice Minus Water

Jan 2, 2017

For the second year in a row, low tides in Venice have sunk to such record levels that it has left the city almost entirely without water. V...

The Swing of Casa Del Arbol, Ecuador

Jan 2, 2017

For the past few years, Carlos Sanchez, a volunteer with the Military Geographical Institute, has been assisting a group of a volcanologists...

A Blast From The Past: Episode 31

Dec 31, 2016

This will be the last post for 2016. Happy New Year to everyone. See you next year. From the archives of Amusing Planet. Kiribati, The Tru...

Jet d'Eau: The Lake Geneva Fountain

Dec 30, 2016

Since 1891, a gigantic jet of water has been Geneva’s most important landmark. This narrow column of water shooting straight up to a stagger...

The Island in a Lake on an Island in a Lake on an Island

Dec 30, 2016

Lake Taal on the island of Luzon, in the northern end of the Philippines archipelago, holds a special distinction. It’s one of only two lake...

The Electronic Ears That Listen to Secret Nuclear Tests

Dec 29, 2016

Twenty years ago, the world's first Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) of 1996, that prohibits nations from conducting any kin...

The Giant Concrete Arrows Across The US

Dec 28, 2016

In the early 1900s, the fastest way to deliver mail was by rail, but there was a machine that could travel faster than trains, and that was,...

Witley Park’s Underwater Ballroom

Dec 28, 2016

Between Godalming and Haslemere, in Surrey, near the English village of Witley, once stood one of the most lavish private residences in the ...

Operation Christmas Drop

Dec 23, 2016

For the last sixty four years the US army has been playing Santa Claus to some 20,000 people inhabiting dozens of tiny Micronesian islands s...

Gävle Goat: The Christmas Goat That Vandals Can’t Keep Their Hands Off

Dec 23, 2016

Every year for Advent, about a month before Christmas, the town of Gavle, in Sweden, builds a giant Christmas goat out of straw. And every y...