Banda: The Secret Island of Nutmegs

Nov 3, 2020

In the Banda Sea, roughly 2,500 km east of Jakarta lies the Banda Islands, a part of Indonesia. For thousands of years, this group of ten is...

The German-Japanese Village Where The Most Fearful Weapon Was Tested

Nov 2, 2020

One of the most devastating weapons ever invented was not the atomic bomb but napalm, the incendiary agent that was used extensively against...

A la Ronde: The 16-Sided House That’s Never Short of Sunlight

Oct 22, 2020

Near the village of Lympstone, in Devon, England, stands a unique 18th century property—a one of a kind 16-sided house built by two fiercely...

Broomway: Britain’s Deadliest Path

Oct 21, 2020

Situated on the east coast of Essex, England, on the estuary of River Roach, Foulness Island has long been controlled by the military. The a...

Casa de las Conchas: The House of Shells

Oct 20, 2020

Casa de las Conchas, or the House of Shells, is a curious attraction in Salamanca, Spain. This stately mansion built between the late 15th a...

Huer's Hut And Pilchard Fishing

Oct 20, 2020

Cornwall, in southwest England, once had a thriving fishing industry and at the heart of this industry was the pilchard, also known as sardi...

The Vespasianus Titus Tunnel

Oct 19, 2020

Around 300 BC Seleucus I founded, on the current southeast coast of Turkey, the city of Seleucia Pieria. Located north of the mouth of the O...

How Medieval Bridges Were Built—An Animation

Oct 17, 2020

Building a bridge over water is a daunting task, and despite the many technological progresses, the basics have remain unchanged since ancie...

Fokker’s Synchronizing Gear And The Birth of Fighter Planes

Oct 16, 2020

The first airplanes to join the First World War were not made for combat. They merely played the role of an observer, scouting enemy positio...

The Space Museum Inside a Church

Oct 13, 2020

About 80 km outside of Kyiv, in the small Ukrainian town of Pereyaslav-Khmelnytskyy, there is a large complex of museums dedicated to preser...

Aqueduct of Segovia: The Mortar-Less Miracle

Oct 13, 2020

The aqueduct of Segovia is a classic example of Roman water transport architecture—simple in design, yet magnificent to behold, and surprisi...

Writing Sheds of Famous Writers

Oct 12, 2020

Writers usually have their favorite writing spots, a small, secluded space, sparsely furnished, where creativity flows unimpeded. The chosen...

Glacier Birds

Oct 9, 2020

High in the Andes among frozen glaciers, where virtually nothing survives, a small and plump, blue-gray feathered bird lays eggs and raises ...

The Spectacle of Death at The Paris Morgue

Oct 8, 2020

Throughout the 19th century, the Paris morgue attracted thousand of visitors every day. Eager tourists consumed by a morbid fascination with...

The Storybook Houses of Los Angeles

Oct 7, 2020

At the intersection of Carmelita Avenue and Walden Drive, in Beverly Hills, California, there stands a house which appears straight out of a...

The Huron King Nuclear Test

Oct 6, 2020

The Nevada Test Site in Nye County, Nevada, about 65 miles northwest of the city of Las Vegas, is scattered with relics from the United Stat...

Abu Ballas: The Pottery Hill

Oct 3, 2020

In 1917, British surveyor Dr. John Ball made an unusual discovery in the Libyan desert in Egypt. About 180 km south-west of the Dakhla Oases...

The 1940 Mid-Air Collision at Brocklesby

Oct 2, 2020

In New South Wales, Australia, about 120 km south of Wagga Wagga, lies a small community of farmers and cattle rearers called Brocklesby. Th...

The Shirt Collar Mail

Oct 1, 2020

On April 21, 1906, three days after the terrible San Francisco earthquake, James Graves Jones dispatched a letter to his family in New York,...

Gbadolite: The Versailles of The Jungle

Sep 30, 2020

Deep in the rainforest, more than 1,000 km from Kinshasa, the capital of Democratic Republic of the Congo, lies the decaying city of Gbadoli...