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Ancient Sex Curse of Cyprus

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Image of Ancient Sex Curse of Cyprus located in Kaourotrypa, Cyprus

Ancient Sex Curse of Cyprus

Sex curse discovered on ancient tablet in Cyprus

In 2008 archaeologists unexpectedly found a curse inscribed in Greek on a lead tablet from the old city kingdom of Amathus on the southern coast of Cyprus. It was simple and straight forward:“May your penis hurt when you make love.”
The inscription dates back to the 7th century AD when Christianity was well established on the island. The tablet also shows a man standing and holding in his right hand something that looks like an hour glass.
Pierre Aubuert, the head of Athen Archaeological School in Greece, believes that this curse may have referred to the activity of witchcraft or shamans surviving from the pre-Christian pagan era. However, the true reasoning behind the curse remains unknown, and it seems little follow up research has been conducted.

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Category: Strange Science, Incredible Ruins
Location: Kaourotrypa, Cyprus
Edited by: katiebaker4, Dylan


The Museum of the Weird

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Image of The Museum of the Weird located in  | A mummy

The Museum of the Weird

Continuing the tradition of the dime museum in style

The dime or dime store museum is by all accounts an endangered species. The first dime museum, "The American Museum," was opened in 1841 by none other than P. T. Barnum himself. It represented a departure from high-class art and science museums, catering to a poorer crowd and offering items of a much more dubious nature.
Part of the appeal of the dime store museum lay in arguing about what was real and what was a "humbug," as P. T. Barnum called a hoax or fake display. Feejee mermaids (a type of fake or "gaff" taxidermy made from a monkey and a fish, sewn together to form an incredibly ugly "mermaid") mixed with real exotic animals, and scientific instruments sat next to a loom run by a dog. Unfortunately, Barnum's American Museum burned to the ground in 1865.
Though many dime museums had disappeared by the 1920s, dime museums such as New York City's Hubert's Museum would remain open until the late 1960s. One of the best recreation dime museums, Baltimore's American Dime Museum, opened in 1999 only to shutter its doors in 2007. So though it may not look like much at first, "Austin's Museum of the Weird" is in fact a rare beast.
Created by artist-entrepreneur Steve Busti, the museum lives in the back of his store, the "Lucky Lizard," and features many of the same types of curios you might have encountered in a turn-of-the-century dime museum, including a feejee mermaid. Among the other items shown are a a cyclops pig, a hand of glory (supposedly the dried and pickled hand of a man who has been hanged), live tarantulas, a two-headed chicken, shrunken heads, and mummies. Among the more recent additions are items from 1960s and 70s camp horror films, such as full-sized figures of Frankenstein and other classic monsters.
Though slightly more expensive than a dime, at only five dollars per adult and two dollars for kids, the Museum of the Weird happily continues the tradition of the dime store museum.
Obscura Day location: April 9, 2011.

Read more about The Museum of the Weird on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Museums and Collections, Wonder Cabinets, Strange Science, Outsider Art, Unique Collections
Location:
Edited by: Dylan, wythe, Annetta, Nicholas Jackson, amberjol, endrihasanas

Niagara Science Museum

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Image of Niagara Science Museum located in New York, US | Niagara Science Museum

Niagara Science Museum

Collection of antique science instruments displayed in recreated 1870-1930 laboratories

When Nick Dalacu was a 17-year-old physics student at Bucharest University, he began experimenting with scientific equipment. Nicks life as a "hands-on physicist" began at that time and will continue as such to the end. "Collecting has been my lifelong obsession," says Dalacu, now 70. Dalacu has made good on that lifelong obsession in his Niagara Science Museum, located in the former National Carbon office building of Union Carbide, where he displays his collection of many thousands of beautiful antique science instruments.
Among more then twenty rooms, the museum presents its artefacts-antique science instruments and philosophical apparatus-in recreated "old fashion" functional laboratories. It contains a recreated 1930s medical office, a galvanometer collection, a collection of antique optical instruments, microscopes and radios, and - most intriguing of all - a high-voltage laboratory. Almost everything in the museum has been restored to working order and is used for demonstrations once in a while.
Part of the motive behind the museum was to display the items in a "Wunderkammer" style, grouped by aesthetic and curiosity, and eschewing the info-graphic, interactivity-heavy style of most modern museums. The aim of the museum is to evoke the same "sense of awe and discovery" that the great cabinets of wonder once did.
This does not mean the museum isn't modern; in fact, the museum is entirely powered by solar panels produced by Dalacu's current company. The museum isn't just a showcase of antique science equipment either: one can buy anything from a used Flammable Cabinet to an Antique Vacuum Chamber from the museum's online store at http://www.scienceline.net/index.php/cPath/54.
Obscura Day location: April 9, 2011.

Read more about Niagara Science Museum on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Unique Collections, Instruments of Science, Electrical Oddities
Location: New York, US
Edited by: wythe, Nick Dalacu, Nicholas Jackson, Facebook_100002909929767

Radio Guy Collection

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Image of Radio Guy Collection located in New York, US

Radio Guy Collection

Astonishing collection of antique helmets, scientific instruments and medical models

Steve Erenberg, aka Radio Guy, has what could only be described as a one-of-a-kind collection.
The collection includes anatomical models, armor, scientific instruments, and objects that are nearly indescribable. But many of the items share a common theme: they are strange objects worn on, or illustrating, the head.
Among the amazing head contraptions in the collection are shock therapy masks, an optmophontome, a radio wave helmet, a bizarre light therapy mask, terrifying dental mannequin, and an English smoke rescue helmet which will be featured in the upcoming movie "The Sorcerers Apprentice."
Obscura Day location: April 9, 2011.

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Category: Museums and Collections, Wonder Cabinets, Strange Science, Medical Museums, Unique Collections, Obscura Day Location
Location: New York, US
Edited by: Annetta, Nicholas Jackson

Sala Gimbernat

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Image of Sala Gimbernat located in  | A semi-circle formed around the marble operating table

Sala Gimbernat

18th century anatomical amphitheater of the Royal College of Surgery of Barcelona

Sala Gimbernat looks more like a cult conference room than a legitimate classroom for medical learning. The walls are bedecked with bright red fabric and imposing wooden chairs form a semi-circle around a marble operating table in the center of the room.
Despite its likeness to a sacrificial chamber, the Sala Gimbernat was actually a renowned anatomical amphitheater. Although a bit grisly in its nature, the amphitheater was used to teach anatomy through the dissection of human corpses. Students and scholars would line the room's stadium seating as a full dissection was performed before their eyes. The theater was created for use by the Royal College of Surgery of Barcelona, which trained many of Catalan's doctors during the 18th century.
Built in 1762, the Sala Gimbernat is one of the oldest surgery theaters in Europe. Its old-world splendor complete with stained glass and golden fixtures can still be toured today during a short span on Wednesday mornings.

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Category: Strange Science, Medical Museums
Location:
Edited by: serflac, atimian

The Body Farm

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The Body Farm

Bring out your dead

Calling William K. Bass's center for forensic observation a "farm" is, in a lot of ways a bit of a misnomer. Rather than growing any particular product, this farm is focused on how organic materials break down and decompose. Specifically, human cadavers.
Behind the University of Tennessee, a little outside of Knoxville, there's a 2.5 acre plot of land surrounded by a razor wire fence. This is the body farm, where forensic scientists and researchers learn about human decomposition. When William K. Bass first opened his center to study human remains in 1981, he had one dead body and a 16 square foot cage. By 2007, the farm had over 150 decaying specimen - many donated to the farm by interested volunteers. The bodies are placed in a range of scenarios to simulate various crime scenes. Clothed dead bodies, naked dead bodies, dead bodies underwater, dead bodies in cars, the list goes on. Bass's work on the Body Farm has revolutionized the field of forensic anthropology.
In addition to the extensive, ever-growing research, the Farm also possesses one of the largest collections of modern skeletal remains in the world, with over 700 in total and an additional 1000 future bodies willed to the project.

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Category: Strange Science
Location:
Edited by: EmilyYaMei, atimian, Dylan

The Magic House

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Image of The Magic House located in  | The gorgeous mansion that houses this interactive kid's museum was originally constructed in 1901.

The Magic House

The Magic House provides a beautiful and creative environment for curious youngsters to get their knowledge on.

You don't have to be a kid to appreciate all the wonder and knowledge that is packed inside the walls of St. Louis' Magic House. Once an abandoned Victorian mansion in the Kirkwood suburb, the Magic House now stands as the region's first interactive children's museum, which is complete with a news studio simulator and an electrically charged ball that causes visitors' hair to stand on end.
It takes more than one day to fully explore and enjoy the scholastic treasures found on every floor of the Magic House. Exhibitions such as the Bubble Room and the Lewis and Clark Adventure are designed to educate and entertain people of all ages. The pin point wall allows curious onlookers to create 3D impressions of themselves, and the Jack and the Beanstalk area gives kids the opportunity to climb a three-story beanstalk just like the hero from the classic children's tale.
Founded by Jody Newman and Barbie Freund, The Magic House is a not-for-profit organization that originally opened to the public on October 16, 1979 to provide students of all ages with hands-on learning. The house itself was originally built in 1901 and served as a private home for George Lane Edwards, who was the first president of the St. Louis Stock Exchange and one of the directors of the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair.

Read more about The Magic House on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science
Location:
Edited by: chelseadeptula, Dylan

Alexander Golod's Pyramids

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Image of Alexander Golod's Pyramids located in Tvertsa, Russia

Alexander Golod's Pyramids

Ukrainian defense contractor's center for studying "pyramid energy"

In the 1930s an occultist, writer and hardware store owner published a theory that pyramids might have special powers, such as preserving food, sharpening blades and focusing the mind. The theory was picked up by Karel Drbal, a Czech businessman who created a pyramid shaped box for sharpening knives.
The idea of pyramid power might have ended here, if paranormal authors Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder had not met with Drbal while traveling and written an entire chapter about the theory of pyramid power in their new-age hit "Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain." Pyramid power was now an established part of new-age belief.
Picking up the torch was Ukrainian defense contractor Alexander Golod. Golod's research on pyramids is bizarre, innovative, and entirely unscientific. Nonetheless he is committed to his work and Golod created a 150-foot-high fiberglass pyramid in Russia to begin his strange experiments. Although he created multiple pyramids, his most notable is an hour outside of Moscow and stands at 150-feet high.
After a number of longitudinal studies, Golod's research found that the pyramid presence had some serious effects, including increasing the immune system, increasing agricultural yield 30-100%, and decreasing the effects of pathogens and radioactive material. Other organizations such as the International Partnership for Pyramid Research and Pyramid of Life are major proponents of pyramid therapy.
Despite a website claiming scientific support from the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences there is no published scientific evidence to support any of these claims.

Read more about Alexander Golod's Pyramids on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Unusual Monuments, Hoaxes and Pseudoscience, Outsider Architecture
Location: Tvertsa, Russia
Edited by: serflac, atimian, Dylan


Dinosaurs Fairyland in Outer Mongolia

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Image of Dinosaurs Fairyland in Outer Mongolia located in Erenhot, China | Get there early to beat the crowds!

Dinosaurs Fairyland in Outer Mongolia

Jurassic theme park in Erlian

If you love dinosaurs and theme parks, but hate waiting in line or sharing with other tourists, then Dinosaurs Fairyland is the place for you.
The park features dozens of full scale dinosaur models as well as bones, both real and fake. There are also lots of photo opportunities with dinosaurs smashing down walls and hatching from eggs. However, Dinosaur Fairyland is never crowded, probably due to its remote location, about 20km outside the town of Erlian in Outer Mongolia. However, this means you will have the park all to yourself, except for the occasional men in military uniform that use the park as a thoroughfare to the bus station.
From the top of a nearby hill, you can see the words Dinosaurs Fairyland written in giant letters, in the same style as the iconic Hollywood sign, spelled out across the ground in both English and Mandarin. Between the writing you can see an image of the kissing dinosaurs found just 15km down the road. Truly the perfect end to your Erlian dinosaur experience.

Read more about Dinosaurs Fairyland in Outer Mongolia on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science, Natural History, Unusual Monuments, Strange Statues, Intriguing Environs, Ghost Towns
Location: Erenhot, China
Edited by: Dampo, Dylan

Clone Factory

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Image of Clone Factory located in Tokyo, Japan | Dolls at the Clone Factory-Very realistic heads, not so realistic limbs

Clone Factory

Japanese company creates clone dolls that reside in the "uncanny valley"

Japan is blazing the trail when it comes to developing synthetic humans. Seemingly lacking whatever it is that tends to give Westerners the willies when it comes to human replicas, the Japanese have been working steadily toward personal clones becoming an attainable household commonality. Androids are still a long way off from being something that just anyone desiring a creepy facsimile of themselves can possess, but the Clone Factory in Akihabara has the next best thing.
For a mere $1,750, the Clone Factory will take a digital 3D model of your head, print it out on a 3D printer, and just like that you have a horrifying 20-inch doll that looks exactly like you. Once your mini head is ready, you may choose a body and an outfit for your tiny monstrosity. Many customers prefer a look that represents a special event, weddings being the most popular, although anything from a sailor outfit to a stormtrooper body is available. Once you've committed to creating a pocket-sized version of yourself, you might as well go all out.

Read more about Clone Factory on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Commercial Curiosities
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Edited by: Rachel

Body Farm in Pennsylvania

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Image of Body Farm in Pennsylvania located in  | Roma Khan conducting preliminary work on decomposition of cattle.

Body Farm in Pennsylvania

A macabre farm reserved part of its 222-acres for dead bodies, all in the name of science

“Old MacDonald had a farm, ee i ee i oh. And on that farm he had a…pile of dead bodies…?” This will soon be the tune of farmer John O’Laughlin at Grace Lair Farm in Tyrone, Pennsylvania.
Mr. O’Laughlin donated a sizable piece of his 222-acre farm to the California University of Pennsylvania to be used by students and researchers as an outdoor laboratory. This anthropological research center or “body farm” will be a place where human cadavers are analyzed in order to better understand the process of human body decomposition for the sake of forensic analysis. Sadly, it will not be open to the public.
This body farm will be the fifth in the country and the first in the Northeast. The others are located in Tennessee (University of Tennessee), North Carolina (Western Carolina University), and two are in Texas (Texas State University and Sam Houston State University). The smallest, at Western Carolina, can hold up to 10 bodies at a time, while the facility at Texas State University is five acres.
These facilities play an integral role in developments of forensic anthropology. "Whether it's looking at crime scenes, or putting the bodies there, we're going to provide meaningful education to students in the field,” says Dr. John R. Cencich, director of California University’s Institute of Criminological and Forensic Sciences.
The fact that this will be the first facility in the Northeast is notable because it is located in a completely different geographical region from the other four farms. Bodies decompose at different rates depending on the climate, and the more elements human cadavers are exposed to, the quicker the rate of decomposition. Therefore, the hot and humid summers, the cold and snowy winters, and the regular precipitation throughout the year in Pennsylvania offers new discoveries in the field of forensic anthropology.
Plans are still being made and details are still being sorted, but Old MacDonald will soon have a new sort of farm that will keep scientists, students, and investigators well occupied.

Read more about Body Farm in Pennsylvania on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Memento Mori, Repositories of Knowledge
Location:
Edited by: katiebaker4, Dylan, Rachel

Indianapolis Moon Tree

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Image of Indianapolis Moon Tree located in  | The Moon Sycamore stands tall in front of the iconic Indiana Statehouse

Indianapolis Moon Tree

A 30-year-old Sycamore tree grown from a seed taken to the moon and back

The front lawn arboretum of the Indiana Statehouse counts several commemorative and interesting trees among its display, and it's up to visitors to decide just how special they actually are.
However, one tree is sure to stand out as undeniably unique - a tall Sycamore tree planted more than 30 years old, from a seed taken to the moon and back during the Apollo 14 lunar mission.
One of only 50 or so trees left alive and well-maintained from an original set of 500 seeds taken to orbit the moon by astronaut Stuart A. Roosa, this "Moon Tree" is actually just one of four that can be found in Indiana. The others are in Lincoln City, Tell City and Cannelton.
It was planted on April 9, 1976, and a commemorative plaque in the ground before it serves as a subtle memorial. Scientists continue to study the growth and development of these post-orbital trees and have yet to find any discrepancies between them and their earthly cousins.
For those hoping to find something truly strange, perhaps the most interesting thing of all is just how normal these trees turned out to be, and how few people seem to be aware of their extra-terrestrial origins. In fact a number of the moon trees have been accidentally cut down by gardeners who hadn't been told that were special.

Read more about Indianapolis Moon Tree on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Extraordinary Flora, Strange Science, Natural History, Unique Collections
Location:
Edited by: Mark_Casey, Dylan

MIT Edgerton Center

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MIT Edgerton Center

MIT students continue the legacy of beloved professor "Doc" Edgerton through learning by doing

Harold Edgerton possessed a long and impressive list of accomplishments and triumphs in the worlds of science and the arts and may be best recognized in popular culture for his striking Life Magazine photos during the 30s and 40s. In a lifelong collaboration with photographer Gjon Mills, the two used stroboscopic equipment to capture images of events that happened too quickly for the human eye to register. Pioneering strobe photography, they captured revolutionary images of balloons bursting, birds in flight, and the impact of a bullet on an apple, just to name a few.
His relationship with MIT was long and prosperous. Earning a Master of Science in electrical engineering in 1927, he went on to receive his Doctor of Science in 1931 using stroboscopes to study synchronous motors for his thesis.
In 1948, Edgerton was appointed full professor in electrical engineering at MIT, and was a much loved and well respected educator there for 30 years. His students adored him for his kind patience and willingness to teach, describing him as a brilliant man who loved to teach hands-on, quoting him as saying, “The trick to education is to teach people in such a way that they don't realize they're learning until it's too late”.
Established in 1992, the MIT Edgerton Center continues the hands-on legacy of "Doc" Edgerton providing access to what he believed in the most – learning by doing. The Center offers a wide array of hands-on courses, supports students' independent projects, competitive student teams such as the Solar Electric Vehicle Team and Formula SAE, runs the Edgerton Student Shop (a machine shop on campus), facilitates the International Development Initiative and offers 4th through 12 grade Science, Technology, Engineering and Math programs and curriculum development for teachers.
As Laura Nicholson '09 said on the MIT Admissions blog "It's sort of like the hidden engine behind the "manus" part of "mens et manus" (MIT's official motto, which means "mind and hand.")

Read more about MIT Edgerton Center on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Inspired Inventions, Instruments of Science, Obscura Day Location
Location:
Edited by: Rachel, camillabrinkman

World’s Quietest Place

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Image of World’s Quietest Place located in

World’s Quietest Place

This lab's maddening silence is good for business but bad for sanity.

Orfield Laboratories in South Minneapolis is the home of “the quietest place on earth,” as recorded in the Guinness World Records. (It also happens to share the same building as the recording studio where “Funkytown” and Bob Dylan’s “Blood on the Tracks” were recorded.) The lab is called an anechoic chamber, meaning there is no echo as the room absorbs 99.99% of sound. It is used by various manufacturers to test product volume and sound quality -- it can also drive a person mad.
Founder and president Steven Orfield likes to challenge visitors to sit in the chamber in the dark, alone. One reporter lasted up to 45 minutes, and most people leave after half that time, tortured by the eerie sounds of their own body. “In the anechoic chamber, you become the sound,” says Mr. Orfield. In the absence of outside noise, is the presence of maddening silence to which the ears adapt. As ears adapt to silence, the sounds of your heart beat, stomach, and lungs are your only reference, and it can be a very disorienting experience.
Mr. Orfield explains that the only way to stay in the room for an extended period of time is to sit down. A person’s orientation is largely secured by the sounds made when walking or standing, and as those sound cues are taken away, perception becomes skewed, and balance and movement becomes an almost impossible feat.
A typical quiet bedroom at night measures about 30 decibels, this chamber measures at -9 decibels. It is made of 3.3-foot-thick fiberglass acoustic wedges, double walls of insulated steel and foot-thick concrete.
Manufacturers use the lab for product testing and development. Companies like Harley Davidson use the lab to create quieter bikes that still sound like a Harley, for instance. Other products like LED displays are tested to make sure their volume is not too loud. NASA, in fact, uses a similar lab to test its astronauts, given that space is like one giant anechoic chamber, explains Mr. Orfield.

Read more about World’s Quietest Place on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Inspired Inventions, Repositories of Knowledge
Location:
Edited by: katiebaker4, Rachel, Seth Teicher

Museum of Radiology

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Image of Museum of Radiology  located in Brussels, Belgium

Museum of Radiology

Dummies recreate radiological discoveries from history

The Museum of Radiology is located in the waiting room of the Military Hospital of Brussels. While patients wait to receive their medical imaging, visitors to the museum can view posters and photographs tacked to the hallway wall depicting the history of early radiology technology. The museum also includes information about current technologies, like ultrasounds and computed tomography.
The museum also includes several separate rooms that recreate, with the help of life-sized dummies, scenes of medical discoveries. In one room, with the mannequins dressed in 19th century garb, there’s a scene of Professor Rontgen (who discovered the use of x-ray imaging), showing his wife an x-ray he took of her hand. The scene also features the equipment used for the radiography on that famous night of December 22nd, 1895. It is noted that six days after this scene actually took place, the invention and properties of x-rays were carefully detailed and published by Professor Rontgen, officially altering the understanding of early medical imaging at the brink of the turn of the century.
The museum also has a room dedicated to scopes – huge, box-like machines used from 1900 to1950, used mainly in catching early stages of tuberculosis.

ithin the halls of the Military Hospital of Brussels lies a truly interactive and highly imaginative display of historical scientific invention. Juxtaposed to current technologies, whether patient or patron, a visit to this museum can only add to the wonderment of the history of medical advancement.

Read more about Museum of Radiology on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science, Medical Museums
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Edited by: AnnaFiddler, Dylan, Rachel


Camera Obscura & World of Illusions

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Image of Camera Obscura & World of Illusions located in Edinburgh, United Kingdom | Edinburgh's oldest purpose built visitor attraction, The Camera Obscura on the Royal Mile

Camera Obscura & World of Illusions

360° views of the city from the Camera Obscura Outlook Tower, and five floors of optical illusions and hands-on science fun

Part funhouse part learning center, Camera Obscura and the World of Illusions is five floors of perspective-bending fun. Operating for over 150 years, it is Edinburgh's oldest purpose built attraction.
Established in 1835, the building was originally called “Short's Observatory, Museum of Science and Art” until 1892 when it was purchased by Patrick Geddes and renamed “Outlook Tower”. Committed to the idea that exhibition is the most exhilarating form of education, Geddes eventually incorporated Maria Short's Camera Obscura, and “Camera Obscura and the World of Illusions” was born.
Part of the purpose of the activity center is to provide a better understanding of Edinburgh, and what better way to showcase the city than to enjoy it through telescopes, view cams, and of course, the 360° panoramic view provided by the Camera Obscura on the rooftop terrace.
The rest of the building is filled with optical illusions, puzzles, mirror mazes, and a vortex tunnel, providing guests with dizzying alternate realities and tricks on the mind and on the eyes. Visitors are encouraged to get involved with everything, play with it all, and unlike a lot of learning centers, there is nothing in this one you are not allowed to touch.

Read more about Camera Obscura & World of Illusions on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Inspired Inventions, Instruments of Science, Optical Oddities, Mazes
Location: Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Edited by: JocksAway, Dylan, Rachel

Lechuguilla Cave

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Image of Lechuguilla Cave located in

Lechuguilla Cave

Lechuguilla Cave - A cave's rare beauty held a cavernous secret hidden underground

Until 1986, Lechuguilla Cave was just a dead-end historical site used briefly for bat guano mining and intermittently visited by enthusiastic cavers. In the 1950’s however, light was shed on this landmark's true potential when cavers realized they could hear wind from underneath the cave floor, and concluded that beneath the rubble was a series of passages. In 1984, a group of Colorado cavers were granted permission by the National Park Service to begin digging.
wo years later in May of 1986, large walking passages were uncovered.
A total of 120 miles of passages have since been discovered, and explorers have pushed the depth of the cave to 1,604 feet, making Lechuguilla the deepest limestone cave in the country, the fifth longest cave in the world, and third longest in the United States. The unexplored passages and novel beauty attract cavers from all over the world. The cave's entrance is adorned with large amounts of gypsum and lemon-yellow sulfur deposits. The wide variety of rare speleothems of Lechuguilla Cave surpasses its sister, Carlsbad Cavern, though Carlsbad’s Big Room is still the largest room between the two caves.
Scientists have five separate geological formations to explore in this Guadaplupe Mountain cave. Studies show that the speleogenesis, or cave formation, came from sulfuric acid dissolution. The sulfuric acid is presumably derived from hydrogen sulfide which migrated from nearby oil deposits, thus it appears that the cave was formed from the bottom up, in contrast to the top-down carbonic acid dissolution mechanism of cave formation.
Other discoveries include the rare chemolithoautotrophic bacteria, which are believed to feed on sulfur, iron, and manganese minerals and assist in determining the cave’s massive size and variety of speleothems, and the “extremophile” microbes that may have medicinal qualities used for human benefit.
BBC’s Planet Earth showcased Lechuguilla Cave’s Chandelier Ballroom in its “Caves” episode. It took them two years to get permission to film in the cave, and it’s unlikely another film crew will be allowed to enter anytime in the near future. At this time, only approved scientific researchers and survey and exploration teams have access to the cave.

Read more about Lechuguilla Cave on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Geological Oddities, Curious Caves, Strange Science, Subterranean Sites
Location:
Edited by: katiebaker4, Rachel

Eyam

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Image of Eyam located in Eyam, United Kingdom | Eyam church by night

Eyam

Known as "The Plague Village" Eyam took steps to quarantine themselves and keep the Black Death from spreading

A small Anglo-Saxon village nestled in the hills of Derbyshire, Eyam has become known as the 'plague village' due to a decision made by the whole village during an outbreak of the Black Death in 1665. According to reports, the plague was brought to the village from London in a bundle of cloth ordered by local tailor George Vicars. He died within a week, and after several more deaths the villagers, on the advice of their rector Reverend William Mompesson, took several steps to ensure that the plague did not spread to neighbouring villages.
Families were required to bury their own dead, and ultimately the village quarantined itself, allowing no-one in or out during the fourteen months that the plague took hold. Reported numbers of deaths vary - around 260 - but it is said that fewer than a quarter of the village population survived. The self-imposed quarantine did, however, successfully contain the spread of disease.
A little way out of the village, on a hill overlooking the beautiful Peak District, stands a small graveyard known as the Riley Graves, so called as they are close to Riley House Farm. Ringed by a low stone wall, this is the resting place of the Hancock family, where Elizabeth Hancock buried her husband and six of her seven children over a period of eight days in August 1666. She was one of the few survivors, and this obscure gravesite - alone in a field on a hill some way out of the village - is now a National Trust monument.
There are many interesting sites within this small village, including Mompesson's Well, where food and medicine were left for the villagers in exchange for coins. Vinegar was added to the water to disinfect the coins within.There is also a boundary stone set between Eyam and neighbouring village Stoney Middleton, where supplies were left at a safe distance. In the centre of the village is a row of Plague cottages with signs that commemorate some of the first victims. George Vicar's house can be seen, as well as the tomb of Catherine Mompesson, wife of the then newly-appointed vicar who took such a bold step in isolating the village, herself an early victim of the Black Death. Also worth a visit is Eyam Hall, a 17th century grade 2 listed historic house.
Every year on Plague Sunday (the last sunday in August) a memorial service is held in the nearby hollow of Cucklett Delf, site of the outdoor services held by Reverend Mompesson during the plague years.
Neighbouring sites of interest include Ladybower Reservoir, with its striking bellmouth overflows, known locally as 'plugholes'. The area, in the heart of the stunning Peak District national park, has many beautiful walks, including many you can take from the village itself.

Read more about Eyam on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Catacombs, Crypts, & Cemeteries, Intriguing Environs, Disaster Areas
Location: Eyam, United Kingdom
Edited by: lisa_tc, Mark_Casey, Rachel

Naftalan Clinic

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Image of Naftalan Clinic located in Naftalan Sahari, Azerbaijan

Naftalan Clinic

In oil-rich Azerbaijan, people bathe in the black stuff... literally

In the James Bond film “Quantum of Solace“ (2008), Gemma Arterton is being killed by getting covered in crude oil. In Azerbaijan, a country whose wealth has been built around its vast oil and gas reserves, and has been known since ancient times as the “Land of Fire“, people seem to be less concerned about the health risks of crude oil.
On the contrary, in the small town of Naftalan, local oil is even regarded as having beneficial therapeutic effects, and people are happy to bathe in it. Naftalan, as local scientists eagerly point out, is the only place in the world in which oil has (allegedly) thermal qualities. Naftalan (literally translated as “taking the oils“) is thus the only spa town in the world where treatments do not involve water, but oil.
Astonishingly, the first accounts of the healing oil of Azerbaijan were made by Marco Polo in the 13th century. He had never visited Naftalan, but noted in his travel accounts stories of magical therapeutic oil springs he had heard about in the area of today’s Azerbaijan. At the end of the 19th century, a German chemist began to export bottled oil from Naftalan, which soon became extremely popular in Russia and neigboring countries.
The spa is not one of those contemporary ethereal beauty temples, but rather a clinical Soviet sanatorium-style affair. A number of treatments are offered, but the most popular is to simply bathe in the black stuff, which after a bathing session, is thoroughly scrubbed down the body.
During the Soviet Union, when the spa town had its heyday, Naftalan was one of the most important spa towns in the Caucasus region, and received up to 75,000 visitors annually. Immediately after Azerbaijan’s independence, when relations with Russia notably cooled down and the Caucasus fell into a number of violent conflicts, Naftalan received very few guests. Back then, a number of the sanatoria had been turned into refugee camps for IDPs, who fled the horrors of the Armenia-Azerbaijan war.
In recent years, the local government is working hard to restore Naftalan to its former glory, and hopes to attract Western tourists in the near future. The oil of Naftalan is claimed to be especially beneficial against psoriasis, arthritis and rheumatism.

Read more about Naftalan Clinic on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Strange Science, Commercial Curiosities
Location: Naftalan Sahari, Azerbaijan
Edited by: Tawsam, Rachel

Kovac Planetarium

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Image of Kovac Planetarium  located in

Kovac Planetarium

One determined man's homemade universe

In 1996, Frank Kovac was frustrated with not being able to see the sky. On a Boy Scout trip to the Mud Creek Observatory in Wisconsin, Kovac and his troupe were unable to see the stars because of a thick cloud cover that obscured the sparkly universe. Thus began a ten-year journey for Frank Kovac: he was going to build the night sky in his own backyard.
Kovac’s interest in the universe was not ignited on that night in 1996. In his youth, Kovac dreamed of being an astrophysicist, but gave up on his college degree. Though a paper mill worker by trade with only a high school diploma Kovac was determined to satisfy his longing for the stars .
The result was the Kovac Planetarium housed in the middle of Northern Wisconsin, “Where the Universe Revolves Around You.”
Kovac created a 22-foot-diameter, two-ton globe tipped at 45 degrees so that it was on the latitude appropriate for his part of the country. Next, he painted every star visible in the northern hemisphere within the globe, focusing on painting each to its appropriate brightness and position. He meticulously hand painted over 5,000 stars in his globe.

he globe itself is only the fourth globe-style planetarium in existence - and the other three reach back to the 15th century. His machine is electrically-powered (the speed can be controlled) because he couldn’t afford to have a projection system typically of state or educationally-run planetariums.
Though Frank continues to works part-time at the paper mill, the Planetarium is his true love. When on the tour you will not just see the amazing planetarium but meet Frank who will proudly state "My name is Frank Kovac and I designed and built the world's largest rolling, mechanical, globe planetarium."

Read more about Kovac Planetarium on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science, Inspired Inventions, Instruments of Science, Intriguing Environs, Optical Oddities
Location:
Edited by: style_challenge1, Annetta, Dylan

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