The Giraffes of Dabous

Aug 13, 2019

In northern Niger, about half-way between the towns of Agadez and Arlit, and a few miles west of the tar road connecting these two places li...

Tomb of Cyrus: The World’s Oldest Earthquake Resistant Structure

Aug 13, 2019

Natural calamites like floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes have always been considered “acts of god”, yet for centuries our ancestors have r...

Lake Titicaca’s 150-year Old Steamship That Runs on Dung

Aug 10, 2019

The BAP Puno. Photo credit: Peruvian Navy . Lake Titicaca, the largest lake in South America, is situated high up in the Andes on the bord...

Republic of Cospaia: The Italian Hamlet That Became an Independent State For Four Centuries Due to Surveying Error

Aug 9, 2019

Nuzzled next to Tuscany, in northern Umbria, lies a small Italian village called Cospaia. For nearly four centuries, this territory of just ...

Jakarta’s Rooftop Villages

Aug 8, 2019

Rooftops make great gardens, especially in dense urban environments where every available space has been utilized for living and for commerc...

The Vitrified Forts of Scotland

Aug 6, 2019

Throughout the Bronze and the Iron Ages, Europeans have constructed hilltop forts and enclosures made of stone. About two hundred examples o...

The 40-Foot Studebaker President

Aug 5, 2019

Few companies escaped the Stock Market Crash of 1929 that plunged the United States and much of the western world into an abyss of economic...

The Bridge of Breasts

Aug 5, 2019

At one point in the distant past, Venice had a busy red light district in the very commercial heart of the city—the Rialto area. Prostitutio...

Prague’s Streets Paved With Jewish Gravestones

Aug 5, 2019

Millions of people walking through the beautiful cobbled streets in the Czech capital Prague are unaware that they are treading upon old gra...

Project A119: The Secret Plan to Nuke The Moon

Aug 2, 2019

Long before the United States President John F. Kennedy delivered the inspiring "We choose to go to the Moon" speech in front of a...

Barge Haulers on The Volga

Aug 1, 2019

Before the era of steam engines, the process of moving a boat or a barge up a river was extremely difficult. The usual method was to tow the...

The Egg War of Farallon Islands

Jul 31, 2019

The California Gold Rush of the 1850s induced another rush for a commodity, which, although not precious, became such rare and expensive tha...

Memorial to The First Icelandic Glacier Lost to Climate Change

Jul 30, 2019

Next month, August 2019, a team of researchers and geologists from Rice University in Houston, along with members of the Icelandic Hiking So...

Tempest Prognosticator: Predicting Storms With Leeches

Jul 30, 2019

Some animals have the instinctive ability to predict changes in the weather. Frogs croak when a storm is approaching, birds return to their ...

Australia’s Mouse Plagues

Jul 29, 2019

Rats and mice are big problems in Australia, especially around the grain-growing regions in the south and in the east. Every few years, mous...

The British Cemetery on American Land

Jul 29, 2019

For its size, the island of Ocracoke on the Outer Banks, off the coast of North Carolina, has a surprising number of cemeteries—more than ei...

Ffordd Pen Llech: The World’s New Steepest Street

Jul 27, 2019

A sleepy little seaside community in northwest Wales will soon find itself swamped by tourists. Just a few days ago, the Guinness World Reco...

Helepolis: The Failed War Machine From Which Rose a Wonder of The Ancient World

Jul 26, 2019

At the entrance to the harbor of the city of Rhodes, on the Greek island of the same name, there once stood a colossal statue made of iron, ...

Jap Herron: A Novel Mark Twain Wrote After His Death

Jul 25, 2019

Mark twain died in 1910. Seven years later he wrote his last novel, Jap Herron —so claims St. Louis journalist and author Emily Grant Hutch...

The Relief Map of Guatemala

Jul 25, 2019

Sandwiched between Mexico on the northwest and El Salvador and Honduras on the east, the country of Guatemala may be small but it has a dive...