Inflated Bullock Skin Boats

Feb 3, 2022

In the early 1900s, American school teacher, traveler, and photographer, James Ricalton, went to India and traveled extensively throughout t...

How a Finnish Polka Song Defeated The Mighty Red Army

Feb 2, 2022

Three months after Hitler invaded Poland triggering a series of nasty and costly wars across the world, the Soviet Union took the opportunit...

Operation Epsilon: When Allied Forces Locked Ten German Scientists Together in a House

Feb 1, 2022

Near the end of World War 2, the Allied forces arrested ten German scientists who were thought to have worked on Nazi Germany's nuclear ...

The Nazi Gold of Merkers Mine

Jan 31, 2022

When the advancing Third Army of the United States marched into the captured German town of Merkers-Kieselbach towards the end of World War ...

Ancient Board Games

Jan 28, 2022

Playing games is a great way to socialize with friends and pass time in an enjoyable way. Humans recognized this a long time ago before ther...

Juliane Koepcke: The Girl Who Fell From an Airplane And Survived The Rainforest

Jan 25, 2022

Juliane Koepcke was seventeen and desperate to get home. She had just graduated from high school in Lima, and was returning to her home in t...

The Kopp–Etchells Effect

Jan 24, 2022

When American war correspondent and photographer Michael Yon went accompanying US soldiers to Afghanistan in 2009, and began photographing t...

The Witches of Paisley

Jan 24, 2022

Four years after the events in Salem in Massachusetts, the United States, that saw the execution of nineteen innocent victims charged with w...

Frantisek Kotzwara: Death by Erotic Asphyxiation

Jan 22, 2022

Frantisek Kotzwara was an accomplished Czech composer and a talented performer of the violin, double bass, piano, cello, flute and other str...

How Sputnik Forced American Kids to Learn ‘New Math’

Jan 19, 2022

The launch of Sputnik by the Soviet Union in 1957 sent the Americans into panic. Lawmakers and educators became worried that the United Stat...

The Ancient Egyptian Obelisks of Rome

Jan 19, 2022

When the Romans were not busy moving earth to build colossal amphitheaters and aqueducts, they were busy moving obelisks. The city of Rome h...

The Lion of Gripsholm Castle

Jan 18, 2022

There is much more to taxidermy then stuffing straw into the hide of a dead animal and sewing it up. It requires the taxidermist to possess ...

The Salish Wool Dog

Jan 17, 2022

When Spanish explorer Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra (1744-1794) was exploring the Salish Sea and its coasts in 1791, he was astonishe...

The Giant of Castelnau

Jan 14, 2022

Legends of giants permeate folklore of cultures around the world. The ancient Greeks had Gigantes who were born of Gaia (Earth) when blood f...

Ellen Sadler: The Sleeping Girl of Turville

Jan 12, 2022

The small village of Turville in Buckinghamshire, about 7 miles north of Henley-on-Thames and 35 miles west of London, is a favorite destina...

The Longest Sightlines on Earth

Jan 10, 2022

Last year around April, residents in the state of Punjab in northern India were astonished to see the Himalayas from the rooftop of their h...

William Huskisson, Railway's First Victim

Jan 7, 2022

William Huskisson was a British statesman, financier, and Member of Parliament. A leading advocate of free trade, Huskisson had been a highl...

Eustace The Monk Who Became a Pirate And Inspired The Figure of Robin Hood

Jan 5, 2022

Every good comic book fan will have read some of the adventures of Corto Maltés and if so, will remember that one of the characters that the...

Frank Hayes: The Only Dead Man in History to Win a Race

Jan 4, 2022

Many sports pushes the human body to the limit, and this exertion can prove fatal for some. Frank Hayes was one such casualty, and while the...

21 Grams: The Weight of The Soul

Jan 3, 2022

What is a soul? Can it be touched? Does it have mass? These questions tormented Duncan MacDougall, a physician from Haverhill, Massachusetts...