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National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek is walking from Ethiopia to Chile on the Out of Eden Walk. But as he tells The ...
With interest in women’s rugby exploding over the past few years, veteran players like Emily Scarratt are getting the ...
Stephen Coates began collecting contraband Soviet bootlegs, known as "ribs," over a decade ago. He also researched the Soviet ...
Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia, in Canada, is known for its historic architecture. The most famous are its three churches, standing ...
John Laurenson from Deutsche Welle, DW, tests out a bathing site along the Seine river in Paris, which was forbidden to ...
The US has imposed steep tariffs on Brazilian goods. But instead of pressuring Brazil’s government, the move may have backfired. Also, the UN-backed group IPC has declared a famine for more than half ...
The African Union has voiced support for the adoption of a map that more accurately displays the real size of Africa. Also, ...
In the coming weeks, roughly two dozen students will become the inaugural graduates from Ecuador’s first public Indigenous ...
Lake View once had a thriving Japanese community, but it fell victim to a push for assimilation. As one Japanese American ...
The taste of water is often glazed over, but a growing group of professional water sommeliers are hoping to bring the world’s attention to the different kinds of H2O. The World’s Bianca Hillier has ...
The skeletal remains of more than 140 people have been unearthed at the site of a mass grave in northern Sri Lanka. They are thought to belong to the island’s minority ethnic Tamil community killed ...
In Barcelona, outside of the surrealist Sagrada Familia church, a lone engraver of glass leans into a grindstone, six long days a week. His name is Toni Moya, and he’s among the last of his kind in ...
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