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If there’s one thing students of history agree on, it’s that there’s a lot of it. Seriously, do you know how many years there have been? By our count, just over two thousand. Plus there are six billion people alive on the planet right now, and those are just the living ones. How many have [...]
Posted by JF Sargent on Sunday, January 27, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged birth control, Christopher Columbus, Christopher Marlowe, Declaration of Independence, gandhi, Illuminati, lizzie borden, Mahatma Gandhi, Margaret Sanger, meteors, Ming, ming dynasty, New World, printing, printing press, Samuel Morse, Science fiction, sensationalism, Shakespeare, Sherlock Holmes, telescope, The Joker, volcano
Isn’t it scary how many people don’t know if Europe is a country or a continent? Wow… What kind of expectations should we have from the poor, ignorant people if even the president called Europe a country?! Now, let’s give the man the benefit of the doubt. Maybe he wanted to say “countries like in [...]
Posted by Timeea on Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Travel · Tagged Aeolian Islands, Agenor, Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, Asia, brazil, British Columbia, canada, Central Intelligence Agency, china, Church of St. Tysilio, craftsman, Decade Volcanoes, Eiffel Tower, engineer, Etna, Europa, Europe, Europe's Capital, European Union, Finland, France, Frédéric Bartholdi, G20 nations, geography, Geology, Iceland, Ioan Stan Patras, Ireland, Istanbul, Italy, Kenneth J. Hsu, King, king of Tyre, Mary's Church, Mediterranean, Mediterranean Sea, Merry Cemetery, Mount Etna, Mount Vesuvius, Napoleon Bonaparte, New Zealand, Paris, Poland, president, Princess, REpublic of Ireland, Rob Butler, Romania, Russia, Sicily, Statue of Liberty, steel framework, Strait of Bosphorus, Stratovolcanoes, Turkey, United Kingdom, United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, United States, United States of America, Vatican City, volcano, Volcanoes of Italy, Volcanology, wales
Update: With the recent (April 2010) eruption of Eyjafjallajökull, the volcano in Iceland, this list is more interesting than ever. The volcano has erupted for the second time in less than a month, melting ice, shooting smoke and steam into the air, reducing air quality and forcing hundreds of people to flee rising floodwaters. The [...]
Posted by Katherine Watt on Wednesday, April 21, 2010 at 6:10 am
Filed under Nature · Tagged Ampera Tunnel, Armero, city, Crater Lake, deadliest, deadly volcano, death, Decade Volcanoes, earthquake, environment, Geology, iceland volcano, iceland volcano eruption, iceland volcanoes, Igneous rocks, Kelud, kelut, kill, krakatoa, Lahar, laki, landslide, lava, mount, mount lamington, mount pelee, Mount Vesuvius, Nature, nevado del ruiz, papandayan, Plate tectonics, poison, ruiz, Saint Pierre, Stratovolcanoes, tambora, top 10 deadliest natural disasters, Types of volcanic eruptions, unzen, vesuvius, video, volcano, Volcanology, water, youtube
A city becomes “lost” when it is abandoned by its inhabitants and left to decay. This can be the result of war, migration, or natural disaster, but in each case these cities can act as a sort of time capsule, leaving a civilization frozen in history and waiting to be discovered. While many of these [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Wednesday, August 12, 2009 at 12:01 am
Filed under Engineering, History · Tagged ankgor, archeologists, atlantis, cities, City Of The Caesars, dead sea, deadly volcano, disease, egypt, El Dorado, famine, Ghost, Hiram Bingham, Inca, Khmer Empire, Kuhikugu, lost cities, lost city of Z, machu picchu, memphis, myserious, natural disaster, Pachacuti, Patagonia, percy fawcett, petra, pompeii, smallpox, Top 10 Lost Cities, Trojan War, Troy, vesuvius, volcano, Wandering City