What a 7-Year-Old Russian Boy Doodled in The 13th Century

Feb 22, 2019

Fifty years ago, a trove of manuscripts written on birch bark was discovered in the Russian city of Novgorod, situated some 200 kilometers...

Mauritania’s Iron Ore Train

Feb 21, 2019

At one million square kilometers, Mauritania is not a small country, but a very small percentage of it is habitable. The rest is covered by...

Witch Windows of Vermont

Feb 19, 2019

Photo credit: Larry Lamsa/Flickr An architectural oddity found only in the US state of Vermont is the so-called “witch window”. These are ...

Water Powered Funiculars

Feb 19, 2019

Funiculars are an odd mode of transport, but at the same time, they are one of the most energy-efficient one. The system consist of two coun...

The Bolivian Clock That Runs Backwards

Feb 18, 2019

The building that houses Bolivia’s legislative assembly in Plaza Murillo, in central La Paz, features a clock above the entrance that looks ...

European Trees With The Most Interesting Stories

Feb 18, 2019

The Environmental Partnership Association (EPA) is seeking votes from the public to help them select the winner of the European Tree of the...

Cemetery Guns And Coffin Torpedoes

Feb 16, 2019

This unusual-looking gun, now exhibited at the Museum of Mourning Art in Arlington Cemetery, once kept body snatchers away from cemetery gr...

Yasukuni Shrine, Where War Criminals Are Revered

Feb 15, 2019

The Imperial Shrine of Yasukuni, in Chiyoda, Tokyo, is a beautiful spiritual place for remembering those who died in service for Japan. As m...

Shin's Tricycle

Feb 13, 2019

Behind a glass case at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum is a battered and rusted tricycle. The seat is missing, and so are the pedals an...

When Little Boys Wore Dresses

Feb 12, 2019

Until about a century ago, in the western world, you couldn’t tell whether a young child was a girl or a boy from the way he or she dressed....

Edwin Smith Papyrus: The 3,600-Year-Old Textbook of Surgery

Feb 11, 2019

In 1862, an American Egyptologist named Edwin Smith bought an ancient scroll of papyrus from an Egyptian dealer. Smith didn’t know how to re...

Historic Watercolors Document How The World Was Before Photography

Feb 11, 2019

Before there were cameras, people documented how the world and its inhabitants looked like through paintings. Oil on canvas was the medium o...

How Australia Remembers The World’s Biggest Gold Nugget

Feb 8, 2019

On February 1869, two British prospectors, John Deason and Richard Oates, were digging for gold in central Victoria, Australia, when their p...

The Statue of Liberty of Lake Mendota

Feb 8, 2019

This is what will happen when the polar ice melts and sea level rises. Well, not really. It’s just a continuation of a prank that started f...

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...