The Allure of Gigantic Excavators

Apr 29, 2020

A young girl stands inside the enormous bucket of “Big Muskie”, the world’s largest dragline excavator. Photo: Charles Barilleaux/Flickr  ...

The Mysterious Hum Nobody Can Explain

Apr 28, 2020

For the past nine years, residents of Windsor city, situated on the Canadian side of the US-Canada border just across Detroit river, have ...

The Turkish Hotel Built Above an Ancient Ruin

Apr 25, 2020

In 2009, a construction crew digging the foundation for a new hotel in Antakya, Turkey, made an astonishing discovery. They uncovered a va...

The Artist Who Got Carried Away: The Story of The Peacock Room

Apr 25, 2020

In 1876, the British shipping magnate Frederick Richards Leyland bought himself a grand house at 49 Princes Gate in the fashionable neighb...

Ama: The Freediving Fisherwomen of Japan

Apr 23, 2020

In ancient times, the only way to gather food and other resources, such as sponge and pearl, from the sea bed was to hold one’s breath and d...

The Shortest Rivers in The World

Apr 21, 2020

Most people imagine rivers to be long meandering waterways flowing down faraway mountains, through the valleys and the plains until it reach...

The Elevator Shaft That Came Before The Elevator

Apr 20, 2020

The Cooper Union's Foundation Building in Lower Manhattan was completed in 1859. This large six-story brownstone building of Anglo-Itali...

The Watts Tower

Apr 17, 2020

On a small triangular plot of land, in a suburb just south of downtown Los Angeles, stands one of the greatest pieces of outsider art—a set ...

The Secret of Coade Stone

Apr 16, 2020

The large lion statue that stands at the east end of Westminster Bridge, near the Houses of Parliament, holds a secret—it is made neither of...

Rettungsbojen: The Floating Rescue Buoys of The Luftwaffe

Apr 13, 2020

During World War 2, both the RAF and the Luftwaffe lost a large number of pilots at sea. The British used a couple of high speed boats that ...

The Historic Meeting on Elbe River

Apr 10, 2020

April 25, 1945, is a date few remember. But it was a significant day in the history of the world. On this day, American troops sweeping in...

The Grain Race

Apr 9, 2020

By the end of the 19th century, steam-powered vessels had almost completely replaced sailing ships in the commercial shipping business. But ...

The Green-Haired Mary River Turtle

Apr 9, 2020

The Mary River turtle lives exclusively in the waters of the Mary River in south-east Queensland, Australia. Despite being one of Australia’...

Operation Tat-Type: Why Some American Kids Got Tattooed With Blood-Type

Apr 7, 2020

Photo: Hole in the Clouds The paranoia during the early years of the Cold War was so great that many American school children were made ...

The Caprivi Strip

Apr 6, 2020

The country of Namibia has a sizeable landmass with an enviable coastline by the South Atlantic Ocean. Yet, a thin sliver of land, no more...

Nyepi: Bali’s Day of Silence

Apr 3, 2020

Every year, towards the end of March, the entire island of Bali in Indonesia, goes into standstill. Flights are grounded, shops remain close...

Digitally Reconstructed Medieval Castles

Apr 3, 2020

Europe is known for its magnificent castles and fortresses, but only a few survive in their original form. Since reconstructing them would b...

The Guillotine Haircut

Apr 1, 2020

Women traditionally wore their hair long. So when did short hair become the vogue? Some say it became fashionable only about hundred years...

Forgotten Jobs: Dog Whipper And Sluggard Waker

Mar 30, 2020

Photo: Nelson Antoine/Shutterstock.com In 16th-century England, stray dogs disrupting church service became such a big problem that many...

Joseph Bell, The Real Sherlock Holmes

Mar 28, 2020

An illustration of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson that appeared in a stamp printed in Alderney, circa 2009. Photo: Olga Popova/Shutterstoc...