Nasoni: Rome’s Ubiquitous Water Fountains

Apr 9, 2019

Drinking fountains in Rome are as quintessential as the city’s many Roman monuments. Standing about three feet high, these 200-pound cylind...

How War Drove to Extinction The Wake Island Rail

Apr 9, 2019

The day Japan bombed Pear Harbor, many American outposts in the Pacific, such as Philippines, Guam, Midway, Wake Island, Malaya, Thailand,...

People Once Downloaded Games From The Radio

Apr 6, 2019

The year 1977 was an important year in the history of home computing. That year, the world’s first microprocessor-driven personal computer ...

Wrigley Field’s Rooftop Seats

Apr 5, 2019

One of the best spots to watch the Chicago Cubs play at their home ground, Wrigley Field, is not inside but outside the stadium, from the r...

Voder: The World’s First Talking Machine

Apr 3, 2019

That voice in your GPS navigator, the virtual assistant in your smartphone, and the automated responses you get when you dial a company hel...

Cragside: The World’s First House To Have Electric Lights

Apr 2, 2019

Nearly a decade before Thomas Edison began working on incandescent lamps and a more affordable way to bring the bright world of electricity...

Carrières de Lumières: An Immersive Art Gallery in a Disused Quarry

Mar 30, 2019

In the Les Baux-de-Provence of southern France, is located Carrières de Lumières , or the Quarries of Light—an unusual multimedia exhibit sp...

Vardo: The Opulent Caravans of The Gypsies

Mar 29, 2019

Living in trailer homes is largely an American culture , but the history of mobile homes originated in Europe. The first trailer home owne...

The Castle of Zafra

Mar 29, 2019

In the beloved TV series Game of Thrones, young Ned Stark is seen clashing swords with the henchmen of Targaryen in front of a spectacular c...

Mimizuka: The Burial Site of Thousands of Noses

Mar 28, 2019

In the middle of a quiet residential neighborhood in the suburb of Kyoto, Japan, is a 30-foot-high, grass-covered hillock within which are b...

WLW: The 500 Kilowatt Super Station

Mar 27, 2019

On most nights, during the 1930s, the airwaves over North America were dominated by a single radio station called WLW. Transmitting at a pow...

Quaker Guns of The American Civil War

Mar 25, 2019

“All warfare is based on deception,” Sun Tzu wrote in The Art of War , an ancient Chinese military treatise, often regarded as one of the m...

The World’s First Cyber Attack Happened Nearly Two Hundred Years Ago

Mar 25, 2019

Many say that the world’s first cyber attack happened in 1988, when Robert Morris, a 20-something graduate student at Cornell, inadvertentl...

The Red Taj Mahal: John Hessing’s Tomb

Mar 22, 2019

The Roman Catholic Cemetery in Nehru Nagar, Agra, harks back to a time when the many princely states that eventually united to become India ...

Syndrome K: The Fake Disease That Saved Lives

Mar 20, 2019

In the fall of 1943, as German soldiers began rounding up Jews in Italy and deporting them by the thousands to concentration camps, a myster...

Why Did Ancient People Bury Butter in Bogs?

Mar 19, 2019

Peat bogs are favorite hunting grounds of archeologists because of the many odd surprises these marshy wetlands have revealed from time to t...

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...