The Goliath Transmitter

May 14, 2019

Communication with submarines is difficult because radio waves do not easily travel through salt water. The obvious solution is to surface ...

The Ice Block Expedition of 1959

May 13, 2019

In the autumn of 1959, a 3-ton block of ice made an 8,500 kilometer journey on the back of a pickup truck from the edge of the Arctic Circl...

Gustave Doré’s Victorian London

May 10, 2019

Our visual image of Victorian London is largely fixated on its sordidness—cramped streets, dark alleys, desolate slums, overcrowding, and i...

The Cranes of River Clyde

May 10, 2019

A giant cantilever crane looms over a car park adjacent to the Hilton Garden Inn at Glasgow City. During its heydays, this crane used to lo...

Operation Sailor Hat

May 9, 2019

On the coast of Kahoʻolawe, the smallest of the eight main volcanic islands of Hawaiian, is a large crater left behind by a violent test con...

Cycling Through Water

May 8, 2019

Through a large pond in the De Wijers nature reserve in Limburg, Belgium, runs a cycling lane that goes right through the waters instead of ...

The Lost Tomb of Genghis Khan

May 7, 2019

The death of Genghis Khan is shrouded in secrecy. The Great Khan died in the summer of 1227, during a campaign against the Tanguts, along t...

Trümmerfrauen: The Women Who Helped Rebuild Germany After World War 2

May 6, 2019

After the end of World War 2, one of the main tasks was to clear the urban areas of ruin and start rebuilding Europe—Germany in particular, ...

The Hand of Glory

May 4, 2019

At the Whitby Museum in North Yorkshire is a strange artifact—a dismembered hand, dried and shriveled. It once belonged to a man who was han...

Berezniki: The Russian City Swallowed By Sinkholes

May 3, 2019

The city of Berezniki, in Russia’s Ural mountains, is slowly sinking into the earth. The city of more than 150,000 individuals was built dir...