The Gastown Steam Clock

Jul 22, 2017

Not far from Vancouver’s waterfront, in the historic Gastown neighborhood, stands one of the city’s major crowd-drawer—a steam-powered clock...

Magnitogorsk: Russia’s Steel Heart

Jul 20, 2017

At the extreme southern extent of the Ural Mountains in Russia, about 140 km west of the border with Kazakhstan, there are some hills that a...

The Way Sperm Whales Sleep

Jul 18, 2017

Swiss wildlife photographer Franco Banfi and a team of scuba divers were following a pod of sperm whales off the coast of Dominica Island in...

The Topiary Trees of San Francisco

Jul 17, 2017

San Francisco residents have a particularly strong liking for topiary trees, as apparent from these photographs taken by three different pho...

The Giddy House, Port Royal, Jamaica

Jul 17, 2017

On the grounds of Fort Charles in the small town of Port Royal, Jamaica, stands a lopsided building called “the Giddy House”. Half buried in...

The 'Great Stink' of London

Jul 14, 2017

In the summer of 1858, Londoners found themselves in the middle of a big stinking problem. For centuries, the city was abusing River Thames ...

Lake Kavicsos, Hungary

Jul 12, 2017

Kavicsos Lake, or “pebble lake” in Hungarian, is a scenic lake about 2 km across located south of Budapest, just a 30-minute ride away from ...

Canal du Midi, France

Jul 12, 2017

The Strait of Gibraltar between Europe and Africa isn’t the only waterway that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea. A thous...

The Model Villages of Britain

Jul 11, 2017

Starting from the late 18th century, many English landowners and industrialists began building villages to provide housing for their workers...

The Mystery of The Longyou Caves

Jul 8, 2017

In 1992, a strangely curious man named Wu Anai, near the Chinese village of Shiyan Beicun in Longyou County, based on a hunch, began to pump...

The Humongous Fungus

Jul 7, 2017

Beneath the soil in the Malheur National Forest in eastern Oregon, the United States, lurks a very large fungus that has been slowly weaving...

Paracas Candelabra of Peru

Jul 5, 2017

The Nazca Lines in southern Peru are some of the best known geoglyphs on earth, but they aren’t the only ones in the Nazca desert. About 200...

Herculaneum: Pompeii’s Less Famous Neighbor

Jul 4, 2017

In late August 79 AD, Mount Vesuvius blew its top off and for three days death rained down upon towns, villas and farms surrounding the volc...

Who Put Bella In The Wych Elm?

Jul 4, 2017

This question, which appears in the form of a graffiti on a towering brick obelisk in Hagley in Worcestershire, England, has been haunting t...

Kuching, The Cat City

Jul 1, 2017

The city of Kuching, in the state of Sarawak in Malaysia, is full of cats. There are cats on the sidewalk, at traffic signals, in parks, ins...

Hattusa: The Ancient Capital of The Hittites

Jun 29, 2017

One of Turkey’s lesser visited but historically significant attraction is the ruin of an ancient city known as Hattusa, located near modern ...

The Forgotten Sport of Octopus Wrestling

Jun 29, 2017

One April morning in 1963, some five thousand spectators gathered on the shores of Puget Sound near the Tacoma Narrows, in Washington, to wa...

The Steam Hammers Of The Industrial Age

Jun 27, 2017

Standing proudly at the entrance to the French industrial town of Le Creusot, in the region of Bourgogne in the eastern part of the country,...

Heikegani: The Crab With A Human Face

Jun 26, 2017

In a small seaside park near the Kanmonkyo Bridge, in the Japanese city of Shimonoseki, stands two bronze statues depicting two Samurai warr...

The Unfinished National Monument of Scotland

Jun 26, 2017

High up on the summit of Carlton Hill in Edinburgh, Scotland, stands the country’s National Monument. But far from being the source of natio...