How The Soviets Put Out Oil Well Fires by Using Nuclear Bombs

Sep 14, 2018

In the early 1960s, the two nuclear superpowers of the world—the United States of America and the Soviet Union—began looking for ways to uti...

Diolkos: An Ancient Trackway That Carried Ships Over Land

Sep 12, 2018

In ancient times, Greek merchants sailed all around the Mediterranean Sea carrying goods from Spain to Phoenicia and from Carthage to Egypt ...

The War of The Bucket

Sep 11, 2018

In a way, all wars are stupid—but none was stupider than the Battle of Zappolino that was waged over a silly wooden bucket. The War of the ...

The Glass Fishing Floats of Japan And Norway

Sep 10, 2018

Every year, Oregon’s Lincoln City, on the west coast of the United States, organizes a treasure hunt where more than 3,000 handcrafted glass...

Guillame Legros’s Ephemeral Landart

Sep 8, 2018

These gigantic graffiti artworks spray-painted over the fields and the hillside were made by Swiss artist Guillame Legros, who goes by the n...

Inemuri, The Japanese Art of Sleeping at Work

Sep 8, 2018

In most countries sleeping at work is not only embarrassing, it might even cost one’s job. But in Japan, sleeping in the office is common an...

Dr. Charles Campbell And His Malaria-Fighting Bat Towers

Sep 7, 2018

Sixty years ago the United States took upon itself a challenge—eradicate malaria from the entire country, all 3.8 million square miles of it...

Moldova’s Underground Wine City

Sep 6, 2018

The tiny landlocked country of Moldova in Eastern Europe is one of Europe’s poorest. “The roads are a bone-shaking ordeal. Horses haul carts...

The Miniature Coffins of Arthur’s Seat

Sep 5, 2018

At the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh are a set of eight miniature coffins carved in wood and decorated with tinned iron. Each cof...

Xiaohe: A 4000-Year-Old Desert Cemetery

Sep 5, 2018

In the far eastern edge of the desolate Taklamakan Desert, hundreds of kilometers from the nearest settlement, a clump of dense wooden stake...

The Most Kissed Girl in The World: The Mona Lisa of The Seine

Sep 1, 2018

Sometime in the late 19th century, the body of a young woman was fished out of the Seine River in Paris. Because there was no evidence of vi...

The Mail That Was Smuggled to The Moon

Aug 30, 2018

A lot of objects flew to the moon and back aboard NASA’s Saturn rocket. During the Apollo missions and those before that, astronauts were al...

Hungary’s Hyperinflation: The Worst Case of Inflation in History

Aug 29, 2018

The amount of Bolivars needed to buy 2.4 kg of chicken in Venezuela today. Photo credit: Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters The economic situa...

Alberta’s War on Rats

Aug 28, 2018

The brown rat is an extremely invasive species—a pest, that survive on human-produced garbage, usually, but often times this nasty rodent ...

The Hunger Stones of The Elbe River

Aug 27, 2018

A record drought in Europe this year has exposed over a dozen boulders along the Elbe River, that usually stays below the water line, in an...

The Gigantic Wine Barrel of Heidelberg

Aug 27, 2018

In a cellar under the Heidelberg Castle, in the German town of Heidelberg, sits a gigantic wooden keg. It’s the world’s largest wine barrel ...

The Island Named After A Satellite

Aug 25, 2018

Satellite imagery, made available to the public through applications such as Google Earth and Google Maps, have allowed anybody with a compu...

The Clifftop Folly of Frederick Hervey

Aug 24, 2018

Perched dramatically on the edge of a 120 feet tall cliff, overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, the Mussenden Temple near Castlerock, in the nort...

The Skeleton of Jeremy Bentham

Aug 24, 2018

Pictured above is the council meeting of the University College London. The council meets every year, but this particular picture was taken...

The British Quarry That Hid Van Gogh, da Vinci and Rembrandt

Aug 22, 2018

For four years, a disused slate quarry in a remote mountain in North Wales became home to some of the world’s greatest artistic masterpieces...