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Urban Studies
Can you travel by rail from Portugal all the way to Singapore? In theory, yes. In practice? Not so much.
Common knowledge says the maximum size of a PDF is as big as 40% of Germany — but that’s a gross underestimate.
A study on the “moral circles” of liberals and conservatives gets drafted into the culture wars — with mixed results.
"It’s only natural for us to get America back," quipped Kim Kielsen, former prime minister of Greenland, in 2019.
The Roman Empire at one point emitted roughly 3,600 tons of lead dust per year, causing “widespread cognitive decline.”
Dubbed "Valeriana" by researchers, the city of 50,000 peaked around 800 AD before being swallowed by the jungle.
In 8,000-mile journey, a male humpback ditches Colombia for Tanzania — however, scientists don’t know why he made the trip.
In post-Soviet nations where ministers have a relatively high BMI, corruption tends to be high, too.
A new railway will switch the Baltic region's train gauge from Soviet to standard European — a megaproject with political, economic, and military dimensions.
A member of a species that kills trees, this mushroom is not the first to be called the Humongous Fungus — and perhaps not the last.
In 1980, Willy Brandt drew a line across the map that still influences how we think about the world.
Great tidal ranges are relatively rare on a global scale — and can be very deadly to the unsuspecting foreshore walker.
Early modern humans interbred with Neanderthals — and scientists recently pinpointed a key site of contact.
Australia's AAPowerLink boasts three global superlatives: largest solar farm, largest battery, and longest power cable.
The hidden story behind Greek surnames and how they trace family origins across the country — starting with the name of a would-be U.S. president.