Jap Herron: A Novel Mark Twain Wrote After His Death

Jul 25, 2019

Mark twain died in 1910. Seven years later he wrote his last novel, Jap Herron —so claims St. Louis journalist and author Emily Grant Hutch...

The Relief Map of Guatemala

Jul 25, 2019

Sandwiched between Mexico on the northwest and El Salvador and Honduras on the east, the country of Guatemala may be small but it has a dive...

The Japanese Fishing Boat Whose Lethal Encounter With An Atomic Bomb Inspired Godzilla

Jul 24, 2019

Tucked away in a corner of Yumenoshima Park in Tokyo, a ten-minute-walk away from Shin Kiba Station, is a tall A-frame building. Sitting in...

Crannogs: Neolithic-Era Artificial Islands

Jul 23, 2019

The Neolithic people of Great Britain were prolific builders. Just look at the British Isles—they are studded with countless ancient megalit...

The Rotating Solariums of Jean Saidman

Jul 22, 2019

The importance of sunlight to human health is well understood, and that understanding developed in the late 19th century when it was discov...

The Islands of Loosdrecht Lakes

Jul 22, 2019

Narrow elongated islands seen in an area called Scheendijk in the Loosdrecht Lakes, The Netherlands. Photo credit: George Steinmetz The L...

The Mahogany Ship: An Australian Maritime Mystery

Jul 20, 2019

One of Australia's most enduring maritime mysteries is a shipwreck known as the “Mahogany Ship”. It was first spotted in 1836 by a party...

The Aqueduct of Loukous

Jul 18, 2019

In the Greek municipality of North Kynouria in Peloponnese, near the villa of Herodes Atticus, a wealthy Greek aristocrat and a Roman senato...

Wainhouse Tower: The Tallest Folly

Jul 18, 2019

Wainhouse Tower, standing high on a hill in the King Cross area of Halifax, is the tallest structure in Calderdale and a prominent landmark ...

Via Cava: The Cave Roads of Tuscany

Jul 17, 2019

In southern Tuscany, there is a mysterious network of old pathways deeply entranced into massive rocks appearing like narrow canyons flanked...