Steneto Nature Reserve, Balkan Mountains, Bulgaria
© Evgeni Dinev
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@landscapeshub
Steneto Nature Reserve, Balkan Mountains, Bulgaria
© Evgeni Dinev
Aiguilles d'Arves, Savoie, France
© Baptiste Gerbet
Mu Cang Chai, Yen Bai, Vietnam
© Jakkree Thampitakkul
Cinque Torri, Belluno, Italy
© OK - Photography
Navajo Upper Antelope Canyon, Arizona, USA
© Jure Kravanja
Vestrahorn, Iceland
© Leonid Tit / Adobe Stock
Dolomites, South Tyrol, Italy
© Janoka82 / iStock / Getty Images
A Ferris wheel glows at the Prado seaside park in Marseille, France
Although the Old Port offers the more familiar seaside glimpse of Marseille, we’re here at a part of the coastline roughly four miles south, down the Cote d’Azur. Known as the Prado seaside park, this area offers some of the only sizeable stretches of sand in the Marseille area. (And, as far as we know, the only giant Ferris wheel.) When sunbathers are done here they can explore more of this ancient and storied part of the French Riviera, including the historic city center and surroundings. And we don’t use the word ‘historic’ lightly. It’s estimated the Marseille area has been inhabited for nearly 30,000 years.
© oran Baković / 500Px Plus / Getty Images
A pier in Corinthia, Greece
Corinthia is a regional unit of Greece, located in the Peloponnese region. Those are the dry geographical facts, but the region’s historical legacy is an altogether more interesting story. World powers began battling for control over this area thousands of years ago. Most were eyeing the strategic Corinth Isthmus connecting the Peloponnese peninsula to mainland Greece. The Ancient Greeks attempted to carve a passage through the land bridge (where’s Zeus when you need him?) for an easier transit of the 8,320-square-mile peninsula. It wasn’t until 1893 that technology caught up with ambition and a canal was dug for maritime passage. The ensuing development in the region has led parts of Corinthia to become essentially suburbs of Athens.
© ilias beros/ 500px prime / Getty Image
The Milky Way galaxy
Some four centuries ago, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei discovered that the Milky Way, that great swath of light spread across the night sky, is made up of individual stars. Before this genius peered through his telescope, observers thought the galaxy was a mass of nebulous, cloudy matter. As our telescopes have gotten more powerful, so has our understanding of the place we live in. It took another 300 or so years to disprove the idea that all the stars in the universe were contained in the Milky Way. It’s now believed that our home galaxy is just one of more than 100 billion—and perhaps as many as 2 trillion—galaxies in the observable universe.
© Stefano Garau / Shutterstock
Ama Dablam, Province No. 1, Nepal
© Richard Ackroyd
Lake Tahoe, Nevada, USA
© Tim Miley / Moment / Getty images
Phu Chi Fa, Thailand
© MAGNIFIER / iStock / Getty Images
Mount Rainier, Washington, USA
© Randall J Hodges
Boseong Green Tea Field, South Korea
© Jaewoon U
Le Piscine, Costa Serena, Palau
© Giulio Rosso Chioso
Taepyung Salt Farm, South Korea
© Tiger Seo