Cynthia, The Celebrity Mannequin

Feb 11, 2020

The story of Pygmalion, from ancient Greek mythology, is well known. Pygmalion was a sculptor who fell in love with his own creation, which ...

London’s Only Lighthouse

Feb 10, 2020

On the north bank of River Thames, just across the iconic O2 arena (formerly known as the Millennium Dome), stands London’s only lighthouse....

The Tunnel of Eupalinos

Feb 10, 2020

Digging tunnels is probably among the most toughest engineering projects the ancient people undertook, because it required mastering several...

The Znamya Space Mirror

Feb 6, 2020

For a few hours just before dawn on the night of 4 February 1993, a giant spotlight, 5 kilometers in diameter, raced across Europe from we...

Town Pounds

Feb 5, 2020

Scattered across the English countryside and in many former British colonies, especially northeastern United States—an area historically kno...

Dilmun Burial Mounds

Feb 5, 2020

You can’t get around Bahrain without spotting at least one burial mound. They appear like small conical hills, and they usually occur in gro...

That Time When Computer Memory Was Handwoven by Women

Feb 4, 2020

Computer technology from yesteryears look comically primitive and bulky. One popular image frequently shared in social media sites show a ...

The Murders Written in Stone

Feb 3, 2020

The Ardwell House East Lodge sits right on the edge of A716 that runs along the east coast of the Rhins of Galloway, in southern Scotland. L...

Peter's Café Sport: The Post Office in The Middle of The Atlantic

Feb 1, 2020

The Azores in the North Atlantic is one of the most remote archipelago in the world. Situated about 1,500 km from the west coast of Portugal...

The Beatles’ Bumprints in Plymouth Hoe

Jan 31, 2020

The Chinese Theater in Hollywood Blvd is famous for its many footprints and handprints of celebrities set into concrete blocks, but where ca...

Brighton And Rottingdean Seashore Electric Railway

Jan 31, 2020

Two children looking up at the car of the Brighton and Rottingdean Seashore Electric Railway. Photo: Hemmings Motor News For five years...

The Walnut Grove of Arslanbob

Jan 28, 2020

In the Djalalabad region of Southern Kyrgyzstan, at the foot of the Babash Ata Mountain, lies the village of Arslanbob surrounded by an enor...

Abu Hureyra, The Place Where Humans Became Farmers

Jan 28, 2020

Civilization is said to have begun independently across the world at six sites, dubbed the “cradle of civilization. Two of these are in the ...

Scuttling at Scapa Flow: When The German Navy Sank its Own Ships

Jan 27, 2020

The Armistice of 11 November 1918, that ended hostiles between the Allied and the Allies, left little for negotiation. The Germans were give...

The Last German Surrender

Jan 24, 2020

The weather station where 11 German soldiers were trapped, forgotten by the fallen Nazis. Weather played an important role during the Se...

The Ghost Town of Gagnon, Quebec

Jan 23, 2020

Gagnon, in Quebec, is a ghost town unlike any other. There are no abandoned buildings, or homes, or any visible infrastructure that would su...

The 6,000-Year-Old Eel Traps of Budj Bim

Jan 23, 2020

The Gunditjmara people of southwestern Victoria, Australia, have been living in a region of roughly 7,000 square kilometers west of Hopkins ...

Stannard Rock Light: The Loneliest Place in The World

Jan 22, 2020

The life of a light housekeeper is always lonely, but for sixty years those who served the Stannard Rock Light in Lake Superior, it was extr...

The Skull Tower of Niš, Serbia

Jan 21, 2020

In the city of Niš, in the heart of the Balkan Peninsula, stands a macabre monument to the Serbian resistance against the Ottoman's 400-...

The Locomotive That Walked: William Brunton’s Steam Horse

Jan 20, 2020

Railway engineering has come a long way from Richard Trevithick’s first steam locomotive to today’s high speed Maglev trains. Throughout th...