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Dangerous holes and rotten planks held aloft by tiny pieces of rusted cable stretch as far as you can see. Somewhere below you lies an immense body of water… The howling wind makes the bridge sway side to side and as you grab a railing to hold onto, you suddenly feel how the heart starts [...]
Posted by Timeea on Sunday, January 6, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Nature, Travel · Tagged angels landing, apurimac river, big gate road, bridges, china, climbing, el caminito del ray, el chorro, glass skywalk trail, guadalhorce river, haiku stairs, half dome, hawaiii, heaven linking avenue, heaven's gate, hiking trails, hua shan trail, hunza valley, hussaini bridge, Inca, inca trail to machu picchu, incans, keshwa chaca, lake borit, mount hua, national forest park, Pakistan, peru, rope bridges, Spain, stairs of death, suspension bridge, Switzerland, the king's little pathway, Tianmen Mountain National Forest Park, trift bridge, UK, USA, yosemite valley, zion natural park
Eighteen is a special time in a person’s life. In most countries, 18-years-old is when an individual is legally considered an adult and can assume control over their actions and decisions. As we move into the 21st century, the age of maturity has risen. A 15-year-old boy living in the Middle Ages had greater responsibilities [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Monday, September 19, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged Actor, advocate for AIDS research and public education, After You've Gone, AIDS, Akhenaten, Akhetaten, alabama, Alabama,United States, Alexander Severus, Allied Control Council, Antioch, artist, Aruba, BBC, Berlin, Berlin,Germany, Beths Grammar School, bishop, blood product, brain death, Britain, Britain's Got Talent, British Broadcasting Corporation, British Columbia, British Columbia,Canada, Caracalla, carpenter, Charles Carlton, Checkpoint Charlie, Chile, club Carlos'n Charlie, Colorado, Colorado,United States, Columbine High School, communist government, Cultural anthropology, denmark, Denver, Denver,Colorado,United States, Disappeared people, disease, disorder, Dylan Klebold, East Germany, Edmund, egypt, Elton John, Emaji, emperor, Eric Harris, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, Erich Schreiber, F-16, factor, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Flores Ramírez, Food and Drug Administration, France, gene therapy, George Herbert, Germany, Great Britain, Greta Van Susteren, Hamilton Heights High School, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, head, Helmut Kulbeik, Hemophilia A, Henry Frederick, Henry Frederick Stuart, hereditary blood coagulation disorder, HIV, HIV/AIDS, Howard Carter, Ichinomiya Hospital, Ichinomiya Hospital in Japan, Inc., Indiana, Indiana,United States, injury, Ireland, ITV police, James M. Wilson, Jamie, Japan, Jesse Gelsinger, Joran van der Sloot, Jordan, Jordan van der Sloot, Julia Maesa, Julia Soaemias, Kansas, Kansas,United States, Karl Norman Bishop, Kent, Kevin, Kimberly Bergalis, King, King Arthur, Kinjirareta Mariko, Knowledge, Kokomo, Kokomo,Indiana,United States, lead researcher, Lima, Lima Superior Court, Lima,Lima Region,Peru, Littleton, Littleton,Colorado,United States, London, London,Greater London,United Kingdom, Magic Johnson, Malaria, manager, Marcus Belby, Marcus Opellius Macrinus, Mary, media coverage, Mercedes, Metro Bar, Michael Jackson, minor injuries, Mountain Brook, Mountain Brook High School, Mountain Brook,Alabama,United States, murder, musician, Natalee Holloway, New York, New York City, New York City,New York,United States, New York,United States, Nippon Television, Nippon Television Network Corporation, ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania,United States, peru, Peter Fechter, Peter-Fechter-Stelle memorial, pharaoh, Phil Donahue, phrase Yukko Syndrome, physician, Plattsburgh, Plattsburgh,New York,United States, pneumonia, Praetorian camp, Praetorian Guard, prince, Prince of Wales, prosecutor, queen, Queen of Scots, R&B musician, recently Filipino actor, reported missing in Lima, REpublic of Ireland, Rob Knox, Rolf Friedrich, Roman pantheon, Ronnie Caldwell, Rookie of the Year, Ryan White, Scotland, Second Presbyterian Church on Meridian Street in Indianapolis, services, severe disease, Singer, Sol Invictus, Soviet Union, spokesman for AIDS research, Stephany Tatiana Flores Ramírez, Sun Music, Sun Music Agency building, Sun Music building, teacher, teenage bricklayer, The Bill, the University of Pennsylvania, Third Legion, Tokyo, Tokyo,Japan, treatment for infants born with severe disease, Trevor McDonald, Trust, Tutankhamun, typhoid fever, U.S. Congress, United Kingdom, United States, University of Colorado, University of Pennsylvania, USA Today, wales, Wayne Harris, West Germany, Westminster Abbey, Wichita, Wichita,Kansas,United States, X-linked genetic disease, Yukiko Okada
Crime does not pay, so the old saying goes, but take a look at the top ten crimes in the world today and the amounts involved and you have to admit why some decide it is far too lucrative to be bad. There are some illegal activities you will not find surprising, such as the [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Wednesday, May 11, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Crime · Tagged Abuse, Afghanistan, Africa, Argentina, Arguments for and against drug prohibition, Bolivia, brazil, Bulgaria, canada, china, Cocaine, Colombia, crimes, Economics, Ethics, Europe, European Union, former Soviet Union, Human trafficking, illegal oil, illegal oil trade, Illegal Wildlife Trading, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mali, Mexico, Myanmar, oil, oil sales, oil-producing countries, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, peru, Philippines, Political corruption, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Smuggling, South America, South Korea, Southeast Asia, Soviet Union, Taiwan, Thailand, the Philippines, traditional medicine, Turkey, United States, USD, Utah, Uzbekistan, Venezuela
The world is filled with ancient monuments built by master craftsmen in order to honor everything from kings and presidents to religious figures. And although most of these landmarks have been carefully studied and researched by scientists and historians, some are simply so old, incomplete, or obscure that we still don’t know very much about [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Thursday, February 25, 2010 at 8:55 am
Filed under History, Travel · Tagged ancestors, burial ground, burial mounds, Cahokia mounds, easter island, egypt, Georgia Guidestones, Giza, Goseck, Great Sphinx, guardian, human sacrifice, Illinois, Indian settlement, Ireland, Japan, landmarks, lunar, Moai, monuments, mysterious circle, mysterious designs, mysterious landmarks, mysterious patterns, mysterious walls, mystery of stonehenge, Nazca lines, Newgrange, oldest site, peru, prehistoric site, pyramids, R.C. Christian, rock formation, Sacsayhuaman, solar, solar cult, Sphinx, stonehenge, temples, tomb, tombs, top 10 lists, top ten landmarks, top ten mysteries, Travel, winter solstice, world landmarks, Yonaguni
Thanks to modern technology and air travel, the world is forever becoming a smaller place. Where journeys from one continent to another once took months, they now take hours, and sometimes it seems like there is nowhere left for a would-be adventurer to really get away from it all. Still, if you have the time, [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, January 8, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Travel · Tagged Antarctica, antartica, Australia, canada, cape york peninsula, china, Civilization, commander, easter island, Gambier Islands, geography, greenland, Inaccessible Island, Indian Ocean, Ittoqqortoormiit, kerguelen islands, La Rinconada, la rinconda, Madagascar, mcmurdo station, motuo county, Mutuo County, New Zealand, north pole, nunavut, ocean, peru, pitcairn island, Pitcairn Islands, planet earth, remote, remote locations, Ross Island, South Africa, top 10 remote locations, Travel, tristan da cunha, Tristan de Cunha