Music in The Clouds

Feb 7, 2019

In June 1867, James Glaisher, an English astronomer and meteorologists, and an avid balloonist, was floating over Paris in a balloon when h...

Globsters: When Sea Monsters Wash Ashore

Feb 7, 2019

On November 30, 1896, two young boys, Herbert Coles and Dunham Coretter, were bicycling along Anastasia Island, near St. Augustine on the At...

James Hiram Bedford: The First Person To Be Cryogenically Preserved

Feb 5, 2019

Will humans ever posses the technology to revive a dead person back to life? Dr. James Hiram Bedford certainly hopes so. He has been waitin...

Gyrobus: The Flywheel-Powered Public Transportation

Feb 5, 2019

Back in the 1940s, Swiss engineers developed a new kind of zero-emission electric bus that used a large spinning flywheel to store energy ra...

Hagfish: The Slimy Creature of The Deep

Feb 4, 2019

Hollywood horror movie monsters and aliens aren’t complete without loads of repulsive slime, mucous and saliva dripping from their mouths. ...

Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies

Feb 2, 2019

Less than one hundred years ago, astronomers were not even sure whether our galaxy made up the entire universe or there were more Milky Wa...

The Tomb That Inspired Britain's Iconic Telephone Box

Feb 1, 2019

The United Kingdom Post Office introduced the first public telephone kiosk, designated K1, in 1921. These were constructed out of pre-cast c...

Juhyo, The Snow Monsters of Mount Zao

Feb 1, 2019

High against the slopes of Mount Zaō, in central Japan, the cold, moisture-laden winds from Siberia slams into creating a natural wonder tha...

RMS Tayleur: The Other Titanic

Jan 31, 2019

The sinking of the Titanic is one of the best remembered maritime disasters in history. A grand luxury ship touted as the safest vessel aflo...

Bookwheel, The 16th Century Forerunner to The eBook Reader

Jan 30, 2019

For many of us, the ebook reader was the next best thing to happen since Gutenberg’s printing press. The printing press made books widely av...

Henry Cotton: The Psychiatrist Who Tried to ‘Cure’ His Patients by Removing Their Teeth

Jan 29, 2019

This illustration of a mutilated mouth is not the result of a road accident, but that of a doctor’s obsession with an utterly bizarre theor...

The Filipino Hero Who Killed Ferdinand Magellan

Jan 26, 2019

Ferdinand Magellan is remembered in the west as the intrepid Portuguese explorer who led the first voyage to circumnavigate the globe, but f...

The Caves of Maresha And Bet-Guvrin

Jan 25, 2019

The Shfela lowlands in south-central Israel, at the foot of the Judaean Mountains, is characterized by a thick layer of soft chalk that was ...

The Ancient Portraits of Fayuum Mummies

Jan 22, 2019

These haunting portraits of long-dead men, women and children come from a vast region known as the Fayuum Basin, located immediately to the ...

Moqui Marbles And Martian Blueberries

Jan 19, 2019

Across many places in southern Utah, in the western United States, where the orange-colored sandstone gives way to the spectacular white- an...

Charvolant: The Kite-Drawn Carriages

Jan 18, 2019

On 8 January 1822, an extraordinary journey was made from Bristol to Marlborough. An English schoolteacher named George Pocock took his wif...

Grammichele: The Hexagonal Town

Jan 18, 2019

Located in the province of Catania, in the Italian island of Sicily, is the town of Grammichele. It is one of the few towns in the world to...

Cloughmills’ Crochet Village

Jan 18, 2019

The village of Cloughmills in County Antrim, in Northern Ireland, has a small model replica of their village displayed in their village hall...

The Great Wall of China Hoax

Jan 16, 2019

“Fake news” is a new term, but lies and propaganda is as old as written history, spread by individuals to aggrandize oneself or smear the pu...

The Gable Stones of Amsterdam

Jan 16, 2019

Before Amsterdam had house numbering, they had a curious way of identifying addresses. Each house and building in the city used to have a st...