Siberia’s Cold Storage Ice Tunnels

Jul 31, 2018

The Yamal Peninsula in northwest Siberia stays covered in permafrost all throughout the year, and while the winters are chilly, summers are ...

London’s Secret Nuclear Reactor

Jul 30, 2018

For more than 30 years, between 1962 and 1996, a nuclear reactor sat at the heart of London tantalizingly close to a busy thoroughfare and t...

The Great Texas Train Crash at Crush

Jul 28, 2018

Some publicity stunts can be complete train wrecks. Like that one time in 1613 when a real cannon was used to spice up the production of Sha...

China’s Waterfall Skyscraper

Jul 26, 2018

In a country where new buildings rise up every single day, it’s a challenge for architects to come up with original designs that stand out a...

Trona Pinnacles

Jul 25, 2018

This unique geological feature, called Trona Pinnacles, are located about 10 miles south of the mining community of Trona, in California’s d...

Demonstration of a Cantilever Bridge

Jul 25, 2018

A cantilever bridge is a bridge whose main elements are cantilevers—structures that are anchored at only one end while the other end floats ...

The Domes of Fabedougou

Jul 24, 2018

These weathered rocks in the village of Fabedougou, near Banfora, in south-western Burkina Faso resemble the sandstone towers of Bungle Bung...

Cropmarks: How Dry Weather Can Reveal Hidden Archaeological Sites

Jul 24, 2018

Across Europe, and the world at large, there are a large number of archeological sites yet to be discovered. Many of these ancient settlemen...

Battle of Kohima: The Greatest World War Two Battle Everyone Forgot

Jul 23, 2018

Perched on top of a mountain ridge, some 5,000 feet up in the remote hilly terrain of northeast India, lies the town of Kohima, in what is n...

Morwellham Quay: A Historic Copper Port

Jul 21, 2018

Just four miles to the southwest of Tavistock, in Devon, England, “bordering the beautiful River Tamar, amidst towering cliffs and gently ro...

Tower of The Winds: The World’s First Weather Station

Jul 20, 2018

The Tower of the Winds, or the Horologion of Andronikos Kyrrhestes, is an elegant octagonal marble tower in the Roman Agora in Athens. It is...

The Story Behind Sydney’s ‘Eternity’ Graffiti

Jul 20, 2018

For over twenty five years, from 1930 to 1956, the people of Sydney woke up each day to a one-word sermon—”Eternity”—handwritten in yellow c...

Before The Internet, What People Asked New York Public Library's Librarians?

Jul 19, 2018

Before there was the Internet and Google, the only way to find answers to a pressing question was to visit the local library and ask the all...

Tura Coo: The Cow That Led A Town To Riots

Jul 19, 2018

A hundred years ago, a small farming community called Turriff in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, became the unlikely stage for one of the most biza...

Broken Promises: The Wartime Evacuation of Imber And Tyneham

Jul 14, 2018

In the beginning of November 1943, all residents of Imber, a quiet little village at the heart of Salisbury Plain, were summoned to a meetin...

Kryptos: The Mystery Sculpture At CIA’s Headquarters

Jul 13, 2018

For the past 17 years, a cryptographic puzzle has stood on the grounds of the CIA’s headquarters in Langley, Virginia, taunting cryptograph...

The Marsh Arabs of Iraq

Jul 12, 2018

The two great rivers of ancient Mesopotamia—Tigris and Euphrates—rises in the Taurus mountains in southern Turkey, and after flowing through...

Roger Babson: The Man Who Tried To Fight Gravity

Jul 11, 2018

Throughout history humans have learnt to live with gravity despite its innumerable inconveniences, accepting it as a physical fact of the un...

Trinity Bridge: The Orphaned Bridge of Crowland

Jul 9, 2018

In the heart of Crowland, a small town in Lincolnshire, England, is a unique attraction—a 14th century stone arch bridge standing by the sid...

Hallsands: The Village That Fell Into The Sea

Jul 9, 2018

The island of Great Britain is shrinking. Every year several feet of land is washed away by the pounding waves of the Atlantic Ocean. Every ...