Dresden’s Tobacco Mosque

Jul 15, 2019

Standing on the banks of the Elbe river, in the German city of Dresden, is a monumental building with a multicolored glass dome and high-ri...

Beautiful Siberian Lake is Actually a Toxic Waste Dump

Jul 15, 2019

The electric blue waters of this pond in the Russian city of Novosibirsk has become the backdrop of many Instagram fans lately. Photograph...

Linnaeus's Flower Clock: Keeping Time With Flowers

Jul 3, 2019

Who needs a watch to tell time when we got flowers? Many species of flowering plants open and close their flowers at specific times through...

The World’s Southernmost City

Jul 3, 2019

The southern part of South America is fractured into a number of small islands collectively known as Tierra del Fuego. Located roughly betwe...

That Time When America Air-Dropped Pianos For Troops in Battlefields

Jul 2, 2019

You thought pianos dropping from the sky is a gag for cartoons? Then hear this story out. During World War Two, all kinds of production inv...

Hellburner: The 16th Century Weapon of Mass Destruction

Jun 29, 2019

In the age of sail, when ships were made of wood, fire was the number one enemy of sailors, and this fearsome tool was used in diabolic ways...

The World’s Longest Dinosaur Trackway

Jun 27, 2019

In the French village of Plagne, in the Jura Mountains, 200 kilometers east of Lyon, there is a set of huge footprints made 150 million yea...

The Triumphal Arch of Emperor Maximilian I

Jun 27, 2019

Like many rulers, the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I had a fascination for large monuments, but instead of actually building them he roman...

The Longest Papal Election in History

Jun 26, 2019

The main attraction in the ancient city of Viterbo, in central Italy, is a 13th century palace built to serve as the country residence for t...

The World’s First Parachute Jump

Jun 25, 2019

On December 26, 1783, a crowd gathered outside the observatory in Montpellier, a French city near the south coast on the Mediterranean Sea. ...

Hermits As Garden Ornaments

Jun 24, 2019

Between the 17th and the 19th centuries, a certain reproachful and voyeuristic trend emerged among wealthy British landowners. Not content w...

Thomas Edison’s Forgotten Passion: Building Concrete Houses

Jun 21, 2019

Of all things Thomas Alva Edison is known for, concrete is not one of them. It was one of Edison's less successful ventures, but not one...

François Coignet’s Reinforced Concrete House

Jun 20, 2019

In a quiet suburb, north of Paris, by the River Seine, stands a derelict four-story building. Its windows and doors are broken, some are bar...

The Galloping Horse Problem And The World’s First Motion Picture

Jun 19, 2019

“The 1821 Derby at Epsom” by Théodore Géricault Horses have appeared in works of art throughout history. They have appeared in prehistoric...

Cunningham Sanitarium

Jun 17, 2019

On the shores of Lake Erie, in Cleveland, the United States, there once stood a giant steel sphere sixty-four feet tall. Inside the sphere ...

Mocha Dick: The Whale That Inspired Moby Dick

Jun 15, 2019

About thirty kilometers off the coast of Chile is a small teardrop-shaped island called Mocha, inhabited by the indigenous Mapuche people. ...

Taiwan’s Giant Wall of Propaganda Spewing Speakers

Jun 13, 2019

Just off the southeastern coast of mainland China, lies a group of two islands collectively called Kinmen. For over seventy years, these is...

The Avian Honeyguides of Africa

Jun 12, 2019

South of the great Sahara Desert in North Africa, there lives a bird called the greater honeyguide ( Indicator indicator ) that has develop...

The Great Aurora of 1859

Jun 11, 2019

On the evening of September 2, 1859, after the sun went down on the western hemisphere, a spectacular show of light began on the skies abov...

Churches of Peace: The Churches That Defied The Holy Roman Emperor

Jun 7, 2019

In the towns of Jawor and Åšwidnica, in the Silesia neighborhood of Wroclaw, Poland, stand two magnificent timber-framed churches. The Holy ...