The World’s Loneliest Tree, And The Clues it Holds to a New Epoch

Mar 6, 2018

In the remote Campbell Island, situated more than 600 km south of New Zealand’s mainland, grows a solitary Sitka spruce that has gained dist...

Wyld's Great Globe

Mar 3, 2018

The famous British cartographer and former Member of Parliament, James Wyld, had a brilliant plan to promote his mapmaking business. The Gre...

The Chapel of Prosthetics, New Orleans's St Roch Cemetery

Mar 1, 2018

Beyond the tombstones, at the back of St. Roch cemetery in the US city of New Orleans, Louisiana, lies the shrine of St. Roch, dedicated to ...

The Ruins of St. Paul's Church, Macau

Mar 1, 2018

The city of Macau in Southern China might be best known for its casinos and luxury hotels, but its most treasured icon is actually a church,...

Wojtek: The Bear That Drank Beer And Went to War

Feb 28, 2018

Archibald Brown, the British official at the port of Naples, looked at the roster in his hand and called out the name—“Corporal Wojtek”, but...

The Triple Bridge of Pontarfynach

Feb 26, 2018

About 15 km outside Aberystwyth, in Wales, is a small village named Pontarfynach, meaning “the bridge on the Mynach”. As the name suggest, t...

Bir Tawil: The Land No Country Wants

Feb 26, 2018

Wedged between the borders of Egypt and Sudan is a small parcel of land that is truly unique in this world. It is one of the last unclaimed ...

The Delicate Art of Cobweb Paintings

Feb 24, 2018

Who could have thought that the delicate, fine, silky threads of a spider’s cobweb could be woven into a canvas strong enough to withstand t...

Whale Graveyards

Feb 22, 2018

Movement of the earth’s crust over millions of years have drastically changed the geography of the planet such that what is land now was onc...

The Immovable Ladder of Jerusalem’s Church of The Holy Sepulchre

Feb 21, 2018

Underneath one of the arched windows of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, in the Old City of Jerusalem, there is an old wooden ladder casual...

The Ships Buried Under San Francisco’s Streets

Feb 19, 2018

Beneath the streets of San Francisco’s financial district lie the remains of dozens of sailing ships that once brought people to San Francis...

Fermont’s Inhabitable Wind Break

Feb 17, 2018

The town of Fermont, situated near the Quebec-Labrador border, is a Canadian mining town. It was founded in the early 1970s by the Québec Ca...

Why is Water Pouring Out of This Tree in Montenegro?

Feb 16, 2018

The Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty recently shared a video about a unique natural phenomenon in a village called Dinoša, located in southe...

Alexander Fleming’s Microbial Art

Feb 16, 2018

Alexander Fleming is widely known as the brilliant microbiologist who gave the world the miraculous life-saving drug called antibiotic. But ...

Rat King: The Mysterious Conjoined Creature

Feb 15, 2018

On a cold January morning in 2005, in the village of Saru in southern Estonia, farmer Rein Kıiv and his son made a curious discovery. On the...

The Rocks That Give Birth

Feb 12, 2018

In the Freita mountain range in northern Portugal, close to a village called Castanheira, is a huge block of granite that periodically eject...

The Seaweed Houses of Læsø Island

Feb 9, 2018

On the island of Læsø, located off the coast of Denmark, there are houses with roofs made of seaweed. These roofs are up to a meter thick, a...

Why Are These Postage Stamps Cut in Half?

Feb 8, 2018

Would you cut a ten dollar bill in half and use as two five dollar bills? Of course not. It's silly to even suggest something like that....

Bank of Vernal: The Building That Was Mailed Through The Post

Feb 8, 2018

The inauguration of domestic parcel post service by the United States Postal Office in 1913 was an epochal event in the lives of thousands o...

Vinegar Valentines: The Victorian Tradition of Sending Anonymous Hate Mail

Feb 6, 2018

In the late 19th century, Valentine's Day was more than an occasion for lovers to express their love for each other by sending greetings...