Tampilkan postingan dengan label Places. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Places. Tampilkan semua postingan

Sabtu, 11 Oktober 2014

10 Of The Most Creepy Spots On Earth

There are a lot of reasons that make a place creepy: it could be a terrifying history, the eerie sense of unease a place gets when abandoned or its ominous architecture. That however does not deter us, especially the adventurous type, from wanting to visit these places. There’s something fascinating about checking out a creepy place and the adventurer in us just wants to confirm that we don’t scare easily. 
10 Of The Most Creepy Spots On Earth
So just in case you are in the mood to taunt death in the future, Here are some terrifying places you can visit.

1. Island of the dolls in Mexico.
 Island of the dolls in Mexico.
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
This place ranks among the freakiest places you could ever find yourself in. Thousands of old battered dolls can be found hanging from trees and they cover the entire island.(source)

2. Winchester House
Winchester House
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
The Winchester house looks like a relatively normal old mansion from the outside, but Sarah, widow of the former residence of gun magnate, William Manchester, believed the house was haunted by gun victims of his husband. She kept building bizarre stairs and doors that led nowhere so as to try and keep the ghosts from ever finding her.(source)

3. Leap Castle in Ireland
Leap Castle in Ireland
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
Located in Ireland, the castle has a bloody history of violent rivalries and executions. It is thought to be haunted to this day, especially after a team of renovators discovered a pit full of spikes and human remains, not so long ago.(source)

4. Matsuo Mine in Japan
Matsuo Mine in Japan
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
Matsuo mine was once a bustling sulfur mine before it was abandoned. If you would like to check it out now, you would be met by a giant wall of mist constantly hiding it from view. This makes it look like a scary ghost town.(source)

5. Centralia in Pennsylvania
Centralia in Pennsylvania
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
A mine fire in Centralia has been burning since 1962 and has left the town abandoned almost entirely. The place looks like a cut scene from the Silent Hill game. In fact, Centralia was one of the inspirations for the game.
Read more here: 50 years on, the fire still lingers..

6. Candido Godoi in Brazil
Candido Godoi in Brazil
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
On first sight, Candido Godoi looks like a fairly normal town in Brazil but if you take a closer look, you realize the town is swarming with twins. In fact, rumors say that a Nazi geneticist fled to this town after the war. He started experimenting on the population and this is what triggered the phenomenon.(source)

7. Kabayan in Philippines
Kabayan in Philippines
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
Kabayan is home to several caves that contain hundreds of mummified corpses. It’s a good place to visit if you really want to have nightmares.(source)

8. Overtoun Bridge in Scotland.
Overtoun Bridge in Scotland
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
You may want to avoid this place if you are a dog lover. Dogs leap to death for no apparent reason and dozens of them have killed themselves over the last half century.(source)

9. Body Farm in Tennessee
Body Farm in Tennessee
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
“Body farm” is actually a facility in Tennessee used as a training ground for the FBI and other forensic experts. They use it to determine time of death, cause of death etc., and they use real donated cadavers. This means that the place is full of dead bodies.(source)

10. Bannerman Castle in New York
Bannerman Castle in New York
Image Source: www.take-a-pause.net
Bannerman castle is a long abandoned residence that sits in the middle of the Hudson River, New York. It was built by Francis Bannerman, a man who spent his time in this fortress, collecting a huge amount of military grade weaponry.(source)
Check out some more articles:

Jumat, 10 Oktober 2014

7 Laboratories Located In Some Of The World's Most Extreme Environments

Researchers will go to extremes in order to get results. They will get out of their comfort zones, or out of our planet in the name of science. The laboratories discussed below are some where scientists have to work in the most difficult conditions, on the planet and sometimes off it, on mountaintops, at the poles or under water.Their work helps us better understand our universe and get valuable information on the weather, the human body, climate change and many other things.


7 Laboratories Located In Some Of The World's Most Extreme Environments

1. IceCube Neutrino Observatory, Antarctica
IceCube Neutrino Observatory, Antarctica
Image credit: Emanuel Jacobi/NSF (taken from)
It’s the coldest physics laboratory in the world. Equipment used to detect very high energy neutrinos (these are subatomic particles that are known to originate from some violent astronomical phenomena e.g., exploding stars) are not telescopes in space. In fact, they an array of sensors located deep below the surface of the earth. In the frozen wastes of the Antarctica, you will find the IceCube Neutrino Observatory located under a thick ice layer. The neutrinos sometimes react with molecules in the water to produce Cherenkov radiation that is picked up by PMTs (the photomultiplier tubes).
IceCube Neutrino Observatory, Antarctica
Image credit: Patrick Cullis/NSF (taken from)
Creation of IceCube involved the positioning of Digital Optical Modules (DOMs), which are spherical sensors that contain PMTs, at depths of between 1450 and 2,450 meters (4747 and 8038 feet). The Digital Optical Modules range over 1 cubic kilometer of ice which makes them part of the coldest physical laboratory and the largest neutrino observatory in the world. Raw data they collect at the observatory is approximately one terabyte daily which is around 1000 gigabytes, transmitted for analysis.(source:1,2,3)

2. Long Island’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, USA
Long Island’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, USA
Image credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory (taken from)
It’s the hottest temperature producing laboratory in the world. The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) found at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, announced in February 2012, the production of temperature of around 4 trillion degrees Celsius (7.2 trillion degrees Fahrenheit). This is the hottest temperature man has ever created! It’s 250,000 times greater than the heat found at the earth’s center. This was achieved by the collision of gold ions at close to the speed of light, and quark-gluon plasma- which is a soup of elementary particles that existed in nature a fraction of a second after the Big Bang- was created.
Long Island’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, USA
Image credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory (taken from)
It’s the second most powerful heavy ion collider when compared to the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. The RHIC facility is also the only one where polarized protons are collided so as to study how protons obtain their spin. It’s the world record holder for the highest energy polarized protons to ever be seen and in addition, it produces record- breaking temperatures.(source:1,2,3,4,5)

3. Sagarmatha National Park’s Pyramid Laboratory in Nepal
Sagarmatha National Park’s Pyramid Laboratory in Nepal
Image credit: YouTube/Lorenzo Pini (taken from)
It’s the highest terrestrial laboratory in the world. In the Himalayas, at the Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal, there stands a pyramid shaped laboratory that is three storeys high. The laboratory and observatory is made out of steel, glass and aluminum. It’s located at the base of Mount Everest at 16,568 feet or 5,050 meters above sea level. The research done here is on subjects like human physiology, geology, the environment and climate.
Sagarmatha National Park’s Pyramid Laboratory in Nepal
Image credit: YouTube/Lorenzo Pini (taken from)
The laboratory was created by the Ev-K2-CNR committee, which is dedicated to the promotion of technical and scientific altitude research. It has three levels: laboratories and warehouses are on the first two levels while the third level is devoted to telecommunications and data processing. The pyramid is a landmark to scientists and also to locals who use its telecom facilities sometimes.(source:1,2,3,4,)

4. The NOAA Aquarius Reef Base, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary in Florida, USA.
The NOAA Aquarius Reef Base, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary in Florida, USA.
Image credit: NASA (taken from)
It’s the deepest underwater laboratory in the world and one of its kind. This is because other undersea laboratories like the Conshelf III and a Conshelf II cabin that were operational during the 1960s, went beneath the waves. The Aquarius lab is around 50 to 60 ft (which is about 15 to 18 meters) below the surface of the water in a marine sanctuary at Florida Keys. It has been used to study the ecology of the reef by researchers for the last two decades. Facilities in the laboratory include six bunks that have a bathroom plus windows that are onto the watery world outside.
The NOAA Aquarius Reef Base, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary in Florida, USA.
Image credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (taken from)
Oceanographer Fabien Cousteau who is the grandson of the legendary explorer, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, spent 31 days at the Aquarius laboratory with five teammates in June 2014. The team studied ocean acidification effects, climate change, predatory-prey relations, pollution, and other topics.(source: 1,2)

5. CERN, Geneva Switzerland and France Border
CERN, Geneva Switzerland and France Border
Image credit: CERN (taken from)
It’s the largest physics laboratory in the world. The European Organization For Nuclear Research (CERN) is located just close to Geneva and covers more than 250 acres (100 hectares) of Switzerland and more than 1,125 acres (450 hectares) of France and is still growing. The Large Hadron Collider is housed in a 492 feet (150 meters) tunnel that’s below ground and that stretches for 27 kilometers (17 meters). And that’s not all, plans are underway to build another tunnel three times this size! Research done at the facility is aimed at uncovering the nature of the universe, so the massive scale is expected.
CERN, Geneva Switzerland and France Border
Image credit: CERN (taken from)
The intention of building CERN was to support collaboration between scientists from different nations. This it has succeeded in doing since currently, the facility is used by over 10,000 engineers and scientists from across 113 different countries.  There are nearly 1,500 employees working part-time and 2,400 that work full time. Since its founding in 1954, discoveries that are important and Nobel-winning have been made at the facility including technological developments that include the World Wide Web.(source:1,2,3)

6. SNOLAB, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
SNOLAB, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Image credit: SNOLAB (taken from)
It’s the deepest underground laboratory in the world. The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNOLAB) found in Ontario, is used for observing deep space phenomenon found far below the earth’s surface, just like the IceCube. The facility can be found inside a nickel mine which is 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) deep. The laboratory covers 5,000 square meters (16,404 square feet) of space. Above ground, it boasts a support building that covers 3,100 square meters which is around 10,170 square foot. 
SNOLAB, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Image credit: SNOLAB (taken from)
SNOLAB research is mainly focused on astroparticle physics which includes; cosmic dark matter, supernova nutritional searches and low-energy solar neutrinos. Scientists from other fields like seismology and geophysics have also expressed interests in working at this facility and this could help underground biology researchers.(source:1,)

7. International Space Station, outer Space
International Space Station, outer Space
Image credit: Oleg Dmitriyevich Kononenko (taken from)
It’s the highest altitude laboratory in the world. The International Space Station (ISS) is the most extreme laboratory in terms of speed, inhospitable environments and altitude. Orbiting the earth at altitudes that range from 205 to 270 miles (which is around 330 to 435 kilometers) and  averaging a speed of 27,724 km/hr (17,227 mph), the incredible space station is 108.5 meters (356 feet) wide and 72.8 meters(239 feet) long.
International Space Station, outer Space
Image credit: NASA (taken from)
A variety of experiments are carried out in this facility including human biology, physics, meteorology and astronomy. The almost weightless environment of the facility (which is as a result of its constant freefall state and not outer space’s zero gravity), makes it a unique research setting. Since November 2000, the facility has been visited by astronauts from over 15 different countries. The ISS is expected to be operational until 2020 but could remain in service until as late as 2028.(source:1)

Kamis, 18 September 2014

The Australian Town Of Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground

Coober Pedy is located in South Australia and is well known for being a dry state; in fact the driest state on earth located on the driest continent. It was established in 1915 after Opal was discovered for the first time in the region. Miners started to settle in the area but they were met by harsh weather and temperature conditions.  
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image source: www.commons.wikimedia.org
They began to dig homes in the hillsides as a way of finding respite from the boiling sun and in the process, a small underground town was created. Coober Pedy people still build their homes underground to this day. During the summers, temperatures rise to over 40 degrees Celsius and it becomes harsh to live there.
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image credit: Hopkinsii (taken from)
If you choose to live above ground, air conditioning becomes a necessity. The scenario however, is completely different if you live underground. Temperatures are always at a cool and constant 24 degrees while the humidity never goes beyond 20%. The winters can get cold but these people are willing to compromise.
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image source: www.dogonews.com
Though the town has been around for some time, it only became popular in the 1980s. Umberto Coro, one of the locals realized what potential this town had and built the town’s first hotel in 1981. People began knowing the town and word about it spread fast. People from around Australia began to visit and now the town is common with international tourists who choose to either stay at the Desert Cave Hotel, at other local inns or at some of the private underground houses.
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image source: www.commons.wikimedia.org
The tourists are mostly attracted by the chance to sleep in cool, spacious and dark rooms underground which never disappoint. Their interiors are designed to reflect the rock’s reddish colors and are equipped with storage areas, bedrooms, walk-in wardrobes, and kitchens that are fantastic. They also have underground churches that add to the attraction.
If you visit the place, all you will see is a huge expanse of land that has chimneys and shafts sticking up from nowhere. You won't find grave yards however since they bury their dead underground. Imagine that! 
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image credit: Duremi (taken from)
The Coober Pedy name is said to originate from ‘kupa piti’ an aboriginal phrase that means ‘white man’s hole in the ground’. The town’s population is about 3,000 people.
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image source: Hopkinsii (taken from)
The town is not only known for its underground charm but also as the ‘opal capital of the world’. 70% of the world’s opal is produced here. Some popular films have also been shot in the town; Red Planet, Pitch Black, Opal Dream and Queen of the Desert. 
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image credit: Aldo van Zeeland (taken from)
For those in need of some physical activity, the town has a golf course situated above ground. It’s not an ordinary course however, because it comprises of nine holes that have been dug in mounds of sand and a huge sand trap. Golfers tee off using a small turf which they drag along with them.
Coober Pedy Where People Live Underground
Image credit: Smart Encyclopedia (taken from)
When it’s too hot to play outside during the day, golfers play during the night using ‘glow in the dark’ golf balls. The second season of ‘The Amazing Race’, the CBS television show, was shot in the town and contestants had to choose between going underground in search of opal and playing three rounds of golf on the hottest golf course in the world. 
[Source: www.wikipedia.org]

Senin, 15 September 2014

Notorious Prison Now A 5 Star Luxurious Hotel Where Guests Still Sleep In The Cells

Het Arresthuis was previously one of Netherlands feared prisons for a period of almost 150 years. It was not a place anyone wanted to stay. Following its closure and a huge makeover, the hotel is now a hotspot and people are paying lots of money for a night in the cells.
Prison Now A 5 Star Luxurious Hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
The former 105 prison quarters have been transformed into 40 spacious and luxurious rooms. They include 12 deluxe rooms, 24 standard rooms and four suites that feature chic interior designs and modern furnishings.
Prison Now A 5 Star Luxurious Hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
The rooms have all been equipped with a flat screen TV, air conditioning, free WiFi and a personal tea and coffee machine. 
Prison Now A 5 Star Luxurious Hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
If you visit the place, you get to enjoy services like a fitness center, sauna, central patio that has olive trees and a garden of organic herbs.
Guests enjoy themselves at the terrace area.
Guests enjoy themselves at the terrace area. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
The prison also features lots of bars-some you just can’t get past and some where you just sit and have a drink.
One of the bars at the hotel.
One of the bars at the hotel. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Het Arresthuis after opening in 1862 had gained the reputation of being an intimidating jail. It was later abandoned for some years only to reopen in 2002. It was closed permanently in 2007 and construction of the luxurious hotel began.
Het Arresthuis when it was a notorious prison.
Het Arresthuis when it was a notorious prison. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
It was also referred to as 'bolletjesbajes' which means stuffer’s prison.
Prison Now A 5 Star Luxurious Hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Other prisons that have been transformed into luxurious hotels include the Oxford prison which, after closing in 1996 it underwent transformation into a Malmaison Hotel. The Jailhotel Lowengraben prison in Lucerne is now a hotel. Built in 1862, this was a prison until 1998 and was later converted into a hotel.
One of the entrances to the hotel.
One of the entrances to the hotel. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Guests enjoying dinner.
Guests enjoying dinner. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
bathroom at prison hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Part of the stylish bathrooms.
Part of the stylish bathrooms. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Prison quarters were converted into spacious rooms.
Prison quarters were converted into spacious rooms. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
The kitchen facility is sparkling!
The kitchen facility is sparkling! Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
One of the cells transformed into a cozy room.
One of the cells transformed into a cozy room. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
bedrooms at prison hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
The original doors have been kept in place.
The original doors have been kept in place. Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
Lobby at hotel
Image Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
[Source: www.dailymail.co.uk]