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Somewhere beneath the scrubby, cracked asphalt of what used to be Route 61 in Centralia, Pennsylvania, an underground coal seam has been on fire since 1962. Smoke still seeps through fissures in the ground. The earth radiates warmth underfoot. In win...
Denver International Airport opened in 1995, ran 16 months behind schedule, cost $4.8 billion (more than double the original estimate), and immediately began generating conspiracy theories that have never quite stopped. Here's what's actually true — ...
Chile is one of the most geographically extraordinary countries on earth — a sliver 4,300km long and nowhere more than 180km wide, stretching from the driest desert on the planet in the north to the sub-Antarctic wilderness of Patagonia in the so...
You already have an image of Mauritius in your head: pristine beaches, turquoise lagoon, luxury resorts. That image is accurate. What most people miss is everything else — the volcanic interior, the deep cultural hybridity, the food, the history,...
Canada is the second largest country in the world by area — 9.98 million km², slightly larger than the entire continent of Europe — and has a population of approximately 40 million people. That ratio of land to people produces a country where 90% of ...
Japan is by virtually every measure the most comprehensively designed country in the world for blind and visually impaired navigation. What makes this particularly remarkable is that the infrastructure is not a recent accessibility retrofit — it is a...
Before anything else, the scale. Mongolia is the 18th-largest country in the world. It has roughly 3.3 million people. That gives it the lowest population density of any country on earth that isn't principally Antarctica. Large portions of it have no...
One of Paris's often-overlooked advantages is what surrounds it. Within a 2-hour radius of the city lies some of France's — and Europe's — most extraordinary destinations: a palace built by the Sun King to outshine every royal residence in history, t...
If you're looking for thumping nightclubs and bottle service, Vanuatu isn't your destination. If you want to drink a muddy, mildly narcotic root beverage in a dark outdoor bar surrounded by locals, watch fire dancers perform on a black-sand beach, an...
You land in Tehran. You walk out of the airport into a country that your government tells you not to visit, that your media portrays as hostile, and whose leaders regularly chant "Death to America" on television. You're nervous. And within 30 minutes...
We're not going to sugarcoat this. The US State Department rates Iran as Level 4: Do Not Travel — its highest warning level, the same as active war zones like Syria, Somalia, and Yemen. That sounds terrifying. But the reasons for Iran's Level 4 ratin...
It's just 25 blocks. But those 25 blocks contain more history, more craft beer, more hidden gems, and more genuine cool than most entire cities. Welcome to LoDo — Lower Downtown Denver — and here's why it deserves a serious spot on your travel radar....
If there's one experience that defines travel in Algeria's deep south, it's encountering the Tuareg — the Amazigh nomadic people who have crisscrossed the Sahara for millennia. Known as the "Blue Men" for the indigo dye of their traditional robes tha...