As is the case each year, the Project Censored website has listed the Top 25 Censored Stories for 2009/2010…
Archaeologists believe they have found the remains of 50,000 Persian warriors lost in a sandstorm in 525 B.C., as told by the Greek historian Herodotus…
Twenty years since the Berlin Wall was finally torn down…Witness the rise and fall of the Wall through the images of Life magazine photographers…
A New York exhibition has stripped back the concrete jungle that makes up the Big Apple to reveal the literal jungle that was the city 400 years ago…
Earlier this week it was put forward that some insidious algae killed the dinosaurs. Now, we are back to the meteor theory – this time believed to have hit off the coast of India, as reported by Mail Online…
Should Christopher Columbus really be celebrated and admired? Read the excellent article at Global Research by Dahr Jamail and Jason Coppola…
Two ridiculous stories appeared on the internet last week. The first involved supposed photographic evidence of a giant serpent making its way down a river in Borneo. For some time, locals in the region of the Baleh River had dispersed stories of a shape-shifting serpent existing beneath the surface of the water…
Following some enquiries from my international friends, I thought I should write a brief post on the current bushfire crisis here in Australia. Living in the state of New South Wales, north of Sydney, I am way clear of the epicentre which is some 800 kilometres away in the southern state of Victoria (and just over the northern border with NSW)…
In 1937, a Chinese archaeologist named Chi Pu Tei discovered strange cave burial sites in the Baian-Kara-Ula mountain range, located in the borderland between China and Tibet. The skeletons found were roughly 4 feet tall, and displayed heads which were considerably larger than their slender frames…
In the 1940’s, plantation workers clearing tropical jungle areas in Costa Rica discovered hundreds of spherical balls hidden beneath the foliage. The largest weighed almost 16 tons and was as tall as a man; the smallest was roughly the size of a tennis ball. When seen from the air, the balls were arranged in patterns…
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