The 4,000-Year-Old Termite Mounds The Size of Britain

Nov 21, 2018

In the seasonally dry, deciduous forests of northeastern Brazil, obscured by walls of thorny-scrubs, is a vast landscape made up of tens of ...

A Barrel Post Office, Mysterious Disappearances and Moby Dick: The Strange History of Floreana Island

Nov 21, 2018

The Galapagos islands in the Pacific Ocean were once natural stopovers for 18-century whalers, who were drawn to the remote islands by fresh...

Schwerer Gustav: The World’s Biggest Gun Ever Built

Nov 19, 2018

Hitler sure had some grand ideas—from mass murdering Jews and conquering Europe, to rebuilding Berlin and draining the Mediterranean sea . ...

“The Miraculous Journey” By Damien Hirst

Nov 19, 2018

A series of fourteen monumental bronze sculptures chronicling the gestation of a fetus inside a womb, from conception to birth, is one of th...

Why Iceland Imports Ice From Other Countries

Nov 17, 2018

The name Iceland is a misnomer. In reality, the country is stunningly green, especially during summer, and only about ten percent of Iceland...

The Korean Exam That Brings The Nation to a Halt

Nov 17, 2018

Every year in November, more than half a million high school students across South Korea sit for the examination of their life—the infamous ...

A Modern Mosque That’s Angering Iranian Muslims

Nov 15, 2018

The fate of a beautiful, avant-garde mosque in the Iranian capital Tehran hangs in balance as the city decides what to do with the partially...

The Homeless Jesus Sculpture

Nov 15, 2018

Since 2013, Canadian sculptor Timothy Schmalz has been placing a particular sculpture depicting a homeless man sleeping on a bench in citie...

Tiny Fairy Houses of Isle of Man

Nov 15, 2018

Tiny adorable “fairy houses” are popping all over Isle of Man, a small island sandwiched between Great Britain and Ireland, in the past few ...

The Tay Bridge Disaster And The World’s Worst Poem

Nov 14, 2018

On the night of 28 December 1879, a violent storm lashed across Scotland collapsing an iron bridge that straddled the Firth of Tay and plung...

Drvengrad: A Traditional Serbian Village That’s Actually A Movie Set

Nov 14, 2018

Two hundred kilometers southwest of Serbia's capital, Belgrade, on Mokra Gora mountain only a few miles from the border with Bosnia and ...

How Solitary Confinement Saved Ludger Sylbaris From The Deadliest Volcanic Eruption

Nov 13, 2018

At the northern end of Martinique, a French overseas island in the eastern Caribbean sea, stands Mount Pelée, a volcano that famously erupte...

The Paradox of Prince Rupert's Drop

Nov 12, 2018

Prince Rupert's drop is a glass artifact that exhibits two properties that are the exact opposite of each other—they are extremely tough...

The Mystery of Lady Dai’s Preserved Mummy

Nov 10, 2018

Believe it or not, this grotesque figure is considered to be one of the world’s best preserved mummies. While her face looks swollen and de...

Dhanushkodi: The Ghost Town Ravaged By Cyclone

Nov 9, 2018

In the middle of Palk Strait between India and Sri Lanka is a small elongated island called Pamban, and it's connected to the Indian pen...

Dutch Prisons Are Being Converted Into Hotels And Apartments Because of Lack of Prisoners

Nov 8, 2018

The Netherlands has a problem with prisons and prisoners, just like any other country. But while the rest of the world is struggling with ov...

ATLAS-I: The Cold War-Era Facility That Tested The Effects of EMP on Military Aircraft

Nov 7, 2018

Flying in and out of Albuquerque, in New Mexico, the United States, one can catch a glimpse of a gigantic wooden trestle standing in the mid...

The Buried Village of Al Madam

Nov 7, 2018

About two kilometers south-west of Al Madam, a small town along the old Dubai-Hatta road, is a spooky little abandoned settlement. It was on...

Brine Pools: The Underwater Lakes of Despair

Nov 5, 2018

Just like there are waterfalls underneath oceans , there can be lakes on seabed too. One is kept separate from the surrounding body of wate...

Letters of Utrecht: The Endless Poem

Nov 3, 2018

In the Dutch city of Utrecht, a poem is growing—one letter at a time, every week, for the past six years. Every Saturday, at around one in...