The Stockholm Lights That Can Be Controlled By Anyone With A Phone

Mar 18, 2019

The 72-meter tall Phone Tower at the former headquarter of Ericsson at Telefonplan, in southern Stockholm, is a known landmark. It is the t...

Alai Minar: Alauddin Khilji’s Unfinished Minaret

Mar 18, 2019

The Qutub Minar in New Delhi is a well known landmark. The sandstone-colored minaret with intricately carved inscription and reliefs on its ...

The Wheel of Urine

Mar 16, 2019

A pot of urine can tell a lot about your diet and health. It can tell whether you are adequately hydrated, or how well your kidneys are func...

The Building That Steals Your Body Heat

Mar 15, 2019

More than a quarter million commuters pass through the Stockholm Central Station everyday, unaware that their bodies are being tapped for e...

The World’s Most Inland Lighthouse

Mar 13, 2019

Of all the lighthouses in the world, none was built further from the body of water it lit than the one on top of Bidston Hill, on the Irish ...

Salt Domes And Salt Glaciers of Iran

Mar 12, 2019

Million of years ago, the Persian Gulf was a much larger body of water than it is today, inundating large sections of the Arabian peninsula...

The Cactus That Crawls Across The Desert

Mar 12, 2019

The narrow peninsula of Baja California Sur, sticking into the central Pacific off Mexico’s west coast, is home to a unique species of cactu...

The Arsonist Who Set Fire to an Ancient Wonder of The World So That People Would Remember Him

Mar 9, 2019

On the night of July 21, 356 BCE, two important events took place in the Mediterranean Basin. One created history, the other erased it. On ...

Stolpersteine: The ‘Stumbling Stones’ of Holocaust Victims

Mar 8, 2019

With hundreds of things to see in Berlin, few tourists pay attention to what lies under their feet. The barely four inch by four inch blocks...

The Catholic Church Built by a Muslim Emperor

Mar 7, 2019

The city of Agra on the banks of Yamuna is a historical city full of monuments from the Mughal period, of which the Taj Mahal is one of the ...

Earthquake Rose

Mar 7, 2019

On February 28, 2001, an earthquake of magnitude 6.8 rocked the US state of Washington cracking sidewalks, toppling buildings, and causing s...

Lunatic Express: The Railway That Gave Birth to Kenya

Mar 5, 2019

More than a hundred years ago, before Europeans had set foot on what is now Kenya, a tribal prophet named Kimnyole spoke of a vicious “iron...

The Roadside Shrines of Greece

Mar 4, 2019

Roadside shrines erected in memory of those who lost their lives in road accidents are a common sight across Greece. They are found next to ...

How The Soviet Helped Vulcan, An American Town, Get a Bridge

Mar 2, 2019

In south West Virginia, near the border with Kentucky, the United States, is a small unincorporated community named Vulcan. Vulcan was onc...

The Last Gas Streetlights

Mar 1, 2019

For much of human history, people have lived in the dark. The sun shines for only half the day, or less—lesser still during winter. So ever...

Bone Records: Soviet-Era Bootlegged Music on X-Rays

Feb 28, 2019

During the Cold War, Soviet Russia was a very restrictive place. The media was heavily censored, foreign radio and television station waves...

Cat Ladders of Bern

Feb 28, 2019

Cats love climbing, and they certainly need no human help to navigate precarious-looking structures. But in the Swiss city of Bern, cat owne...

Buchette Del Vino: The Wine Windows of Florence

Feb 27, 2019

A unique architectural curiosity found only in the Italian city of Florence are tiny decorated openings on the outside walls of many sumptuo...

Qinngua Valley, Greenland’s Only Forest

Feb 25, 2019

Greenland is actually quite white and blue, due to all the glaciers that cover the world’s largest island like frosting on a cake. But near ...

Sergei Krikalev: The Man Who Went Up a Soviet And Came Down a Russian

Feb 25, 2019

Late in the spring of 1991, Soviet cosmonauts Sergei Krikalev and Anatoli Artsebarski, along with Britain's first astronaut, Helen Shar...