6 May 2024

Secretive Supersize Squirrel on Steroids

The Indian Giant Squirrel is something else - it is far larger than the European and North American squirrels for a start - it makes them look like Oompa-Loompas for a start! However, if you are averse to squirrels you need not worry too much - they live in India and so they are unlikely to spring at you from the trees any time soon (plus they are vegetarians anyway!).

Nevertheless, their size is quite remarkable - one can only wonder how the trees take their weight as they leap up to twenty meters between the branches. You can get the low down on these amazing beasts over at our sibling site, The Ark In Space.

Image Credit

6 February 2022

Jaçana – The Big Foot of the Bird World

This is the Jaçana. A fairly unprepossessing wading bird, but take a look at those feet and claws! This really is the big foot of the bird world! Above is the African Jaçana, one of eight species which inhabits the world's tropical zone from Asia to the Americas. Our sibling site, the Ark in Space has the story of this unusual bird as well as some incredible photographs. Go take a look!

Image Credit Flickr User Lip Kee

26 August 2018

King Penguin Crèche - The Biggest Day Care Facility on the Planet

f you have children you will no doubt have experienced the heart stopping moment when you realize the little one has wandered off and you cannot see them anywhere. Whether the feeling is one of relief or panic is very much up to the child or the parent, I guess, but you might imagine, then, how the average King Penguin parent might feel when they return to feed their chick. Yet it is all part of the King Penguin’s master plan for the survival of the next generation. The Ark in Space, our sibling site, has the story and lots of pictures of lots of king penguins.

10 June 2016

The Manpupuner Rock Formations – Russia’s Seven Strong Men

In the Troitsko-Pechorsky District of the Komi Republic there is a flat plateau out of which seemingly burst seven pillars of rock. They are known locally as the Seven Strong Men.

Without a frame of reference you might think they are remarkable but small, noteworthy but only moderate in size. Yet take a look at the tent and the people in the right hand corner of the photograph and you realise that they are – quite simply – enormous. They range between 30 and 42 meters in height (98 – 137 feet).

Local legend has it that they are the remains of seven Samoyed giants. They were on a forced march through the Urals, heading across the mountain ranges to decimate the Vogulsky people. Their Shaman, the largest of the seven, beat a drum to keep his comrades moving relentlessly on towards their quarry. However, he caught sight of the holy Volgulsky Mountains. He let go of his drum and all seven giants froze to the spot.

8 July 2013

Mr Darcy Emerges from a Lake: Again

It wasn’t quite how Jane Austen had originally intended. In fact she never wrote the passage at all.  Yet a certain scene from the 1995 BBC version of Pride and Prejudice caused so many hearts to flutter that it has gone down as one of the fondest remembered moments of British TV of all time. And now it’s happening again, albeit in London’s Hyde Park and courtesy of a trio of artists.

The scene (above) which raised the blood pressure of (at least half of) a nation saw an amorously frustrated Mr Darcy take a dip in the lake of his country pile, Pemberley.  His ardour somewhat cooled, he stalks to his house in sodden but still smouldering condition. He then bumps in to the object of his thwarted desires, Elizabeth Bennett and Georgian embarrassment ensues.  What was intended to be a rather comedic scene lit a million candles: it is said that Colin Firth became a movie star on the basis of his wet linen shirt and breeches.

7 October 2012

28 Bubbles Later


It’s early on a Sunday morning, the sun is rising and a man prepares to drive through the almost deserted streets of London. He drives over Blackheath, eerily misty, the vapors hovering just above the ground – the burial place of so many victims of the great plague.  His mission takes him to Greenwich Park where he unloads the mysterious contents of his van.

Is he preparing for the latest onslaught of the undead? Will he go down fighting, one of the few men left alive after the apocalypse? Not quite. It’s Lionel Stanhope aka the Brockley Bubbleman and he’s in the park to create some of the biggest bubbles you will ever see.  And oh they are glorious. OK, they may not give you the same adrenalin rush as being chased by a horde of zombies but they most certainly beat having your nose bitten off by one of the undead.

1 October 2012

The Giant Slugs of Angers

Angers is a beautiful and historic city 300km south west of Paris. Its universities and museums help to offer its citizens a rich cultural life which spans many centuries but remains vibrantly contemporary. Yet even the cultivated Angevins may not have been prepared for an invasion of giant slugs, the latest work by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman.

Hofman is renowned for his giant installations – we featured his big yellow rabbit in the Swedish town of Örebro last year. For Angers' recent Hanging Hearts Festival, Hofman created a pair of giant, dazzlingly multi-colored slugs.

29 September 2012

James Webb Space Telescope Mirrors Prepared for Delivery

The James Webb Space Telescope is due to be launched in 2015 and before that happens there is a lot to do. This awesome photograph shows the sheer scale of the project.  It shows the 18 primary mirror segments which will ultimately work together as one large 21.3-foot (6.5-meter) primary mirror. They are made from beryllium which is extremely stable at cryogenic levels of temperature. Yet as it is not very reflective each of these mirrors is coated with gold.  Here you can see the mirrors, made by Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp in Boulder, Colorado, packing the mirrors in to special carriers for delivery to NASA.

The Webb telescope is the world's next-generation space observatory and descendant of the Hubble Space Telescope. The most potent space telescope ever constructed, the Webb telescope will deliver images of the first galaxies ever created, and discover planets around far away stars.

Image Credit Flickr User NASA Goddard

4 November 2011

The ArcelorMittal Orbit is Completed

It is twice the size of the Eiffel Tower and seventy two feet higher than the Statue of Liberty but has greatly divided opinion among those who appreciate a sublime combination of art and engineering.  Yet, love it or loathe it the construction of the ArcelorMittal Orbit was completed last week.



Planned as a habitable sculpture the tower is the architectural landmark of the 2012 London Olympic Games. Its creators hope and believe that it will become another of London’s iconic structures and be climbed by generations of visitors.

Work began in February and the top loop of the tower was put in to place last Friday, 28 October 2011. This had followed several days of delay as the winds had been too strong for the four man team to hoist the top ring up and slide it in to place. Its adherents, including London Mayor Boris Johnson hope that its presence in the English capital will thrust architecture in to new areas of adventure. Yet some observers find the spectacle of the tower somewhat disquieting.

Its price is rather unsettling even though it had been planned and budgeted for in advance of the ravages of the economic recession which has seen budgets cut for education and health in the UK. Its £22.7m (over $US36m) cost has led its detractors to claim that it will be the most expensive (and only) publicly funded squashed rollercoaster in the UK. Yet it does have to be pointed out that 19.2 million pounds were funded by ArcelorMittal, the international steel and mining company.

Others, however, can’t wait to set foot on its two observation deck and enjoy the promised spectacular panoramic views of London. Designed by London-based and hugely popular artist Anish Kapoor, his design of ruby red looping lattices of tubular steel was the winner of a contest for the major art venture to both welcome and celebrate the forthcoming games.

London Mayor Boris Johnson, who is not completely unknown for making hyperbolic statements, said “It would have boggled the minds of the Romans. It would have dwarfed the aspirations of Gustave Eiffel, and it will certainly be worthy of the best show on earth, in the greatest city on earth.”  It remains to be seen whether this significant structure strikes a similar chord with the rest of humanity.

25 October 2011

Spectacular Dams around the World

The sight of a dam – some of the largest constructions that humanity has ever created – can be quite breath-taking. Take a look at some of the most spectacular of these structures.

The Hoover Dam
This was considered one of the marvels of the twentieth century when it was built and even though its size and energy generating capacity has been surpassed it is still possibly the most famous and iconic dam in the world. It was completed in 1936 and still has a gothic cum deco inspired feel to it which renders it art while many other dams simply have utility.

It is named after President Hoover who has an instrumental role in its construction. It has been a national historic landmark in the United States since 1985. Its statistics are impressive as well – it is two hundred and twenty one meters high and has a thickness at its base of two hundred meters (fifteen at its crest). That is quite a lot of concrete. Over a hundred people died in its construction including a father and son – JG Tierney a surveyor (popular history maintains he was the first person to die). His son, Patrick W died thirteen years to the day later and is purported to be the last to die on the project.

Grande Dixence
Switzerland is by no means the largest country in Europe but its gas the highest on the continent. Its job is to hold back a lake – the Lac des Dix – and when full it is almost a thousand feet deep and contains more than four hundred million cubic meters of water. As for its altitude, how about an amazing 2365 meters?

Strangely enough, the river upon which it is built is pretty small (the Dixence). However, water is collected in to a system of tunnels over one hundred kilometers in length which takes water from the river and from others. The water is mostly from glaciers. Filled in 1957, this current dam submerged the previous one which had stood since the nineteen twenties.

The Karun Dam – Iran
Whether or not you agree with the aims of the Iranian government to join the nuclear club (ostensibly to help with the massive power shortages of this populous nation) there can be no argument in terms of their attempts to meet the power demands of the country. The massive Karun 3 opened in 2005 and it does indeed go a long way to satiate the demand for electricity.

It is just over four hundred and sixty meters in length and stands at a height of two hundred and five meters. It is an arch dam, which is perfect for that rocky, narrow gorge in which it was built. The curve is more than just an aesthetic feature – the arch forces the water to press downwards against the dam. This strengthens its foundations. Simply amazing.

Dworshak Dam - USA
Construction of the Dworshak dam began in 1966 and it was completed only six years later with the generators up and running in 1973. It was built in the state of Idaho about six kilometers away from the city of Orofino. It is the highest straight axis dam in the western world and at two hundred and nineteen meters in height is the third tallest dam in the United States. The reservoir that was formed behind the dam is over eighty kilometers in length.


The Inguri Dam - Georgia
Georgia is well known for being the birthplace of Stalin (by now you will have guessed we are not referring to one of the United States) and this dam was built at the height of Soviet engineering. Although started in the early sixties it did not become functional until the nineteen seventies. This notwithstanding, the dam is still the highest concrete arch dam in the world.

It reaches two hundred and seventeen meters which is an astonishing eight hundred and ninety feet. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, when borders within the USSR were not really a problem, this dam found itself (still) inside the borders of Georgia. The hydroelectric power station, which is serves, however, is partially in the Republic of Abkhazia. Abkhazia and Georgia do not get on very well at all. Oops.

Nagarjuna Sagar Dam - India
Built across the Krishna River in the Andrha Pradesh area of India, the Nargana Sagar towers at one hundred and twenty four meters in height and is able to hold almost twelve million cubic meters of water. This makes it the largest dam in Asia – at the moment. It is also one of the oldest. Construction began in 1956 but it was a long time before it became fully functioning.

Modern construction equipment was not available in the fledgling democracy of India and so the dam was built with stone instead of concrete. As you can imagine this took some time and it was not until 1969 that the dam was completed and three years later that the crest gates were fitted in order to facilitate full usage. Up to seventy thousand people took part in its construction, with close to two hundred dying in dam related construction accidents.

Srisailam Dam
We will stay in India – and indeed the Krishna River, for now to visit the Srisailam Dam. It is part of the same project to bring hydroelectricity to the millions of people who live along the river and beyond. It is built in a huge gorge in the Mallamala hills and is over five hundred meters long.

It may seem to be over icing the cake, but when you realize that the region in which it is situated is extremely prone to drought you begin to understand why size is sometimes important. Although this image is not perfect it is one of the few copyright free photos available of this dam – special permission is needed to go near it.

Glen Canyon – USA
The stunning landscapes of Colorado provide a back drop for the Glen Canyon dam, which is build on the Colorado River in Arizona. As might be guessed by the surroundings, the place is arid and the mission of the dam is to provide water storage for this particularly dry part of the United States. It stands at two hundred and sixteen meters high and the crest of its arch has is four hundred and seventy fie meters long.

It has been criticized for the environmental impact it has had on the local flora and fauna (as have most of the dams on this list to be frank) but sustains large communities of people spread over three states.

Vajont – Italy
One hundred kilometers north of Venice there is the Vajont Dam, which was finished in 1959. One of the greatest dam tragedies of all time occurred in 1963 when the overtopped and a massive flood wiped several villages below the dam off the face of the earth and killed more than two thousand people. An enormous landslide fell in to the reservoir and displaced fifty million cubic meters of water. The wave that overtopped the dam has been estimated as over two hundred and fifty meters in height and the people below did not stand a chance.

It has been cited as one of the five worst man made disasters (caused by geologist and engineer failure). It stands a more than impressive two hundred and sixty two meters high and is twenty seven meters thick at its base. Ironically when the dam overtopped it was itself left pretty much intact – only the top meter or so was destroyed.

Sayano-Shushenskaya -  Russia
Ah, those Russians! The power plant that this dam supports is the fourth largest in the world and it was opened in 1978. Another example of the gravity arch dam, this one has a crest of almost eleven hundred meters in length. The arch itself is two hundred and forty five meters height. The dam itself forms a reservoir of the same name, which covers over thirty cubic kilometers and a surface area of over six hundred square kilometers. That is large, by any standards.


Almendra Dam – Spain
Salamaca, Spain is the home to the Almendra dam. It was named after the village of Almendra (which means Almond in Spanish) but, as with many of life’s little ironies, it interrupted the course of the river five kilometers away from the village.

The reservoir behind the dam covers almost ninety square kilometers and this makes for a breathtaking view. At a height of just over two hundred meters it is one of the tallest structures in the whole of Spain.

Itaipu – Brazil
The Itaipu dam of Brazil is given its name from a small island that used to exist near the site and it means “the sound of a stone”. One can only imagine what the dam sounds like when it releases its water. The length of the dam is a staggering 7235 meters and at its highest it is two hundred and twenty five meters. To be fair to the other dams on this list, however, it is actually three dams joined together to make one enormous structure.


Three Gorges Dam – China
Although China has many of the world’s largest dams their reluctance to allow people to take pictures of them means that its most famous and accessible – the Three Gorges – is the only one to make this list. To facilitate its construction one and a quarter million people had to be relocated. Although spectacular it is thought that it has contributed greatly to the functional extinction of the Yangtze River Dolphin, a creature which had been around for several million years. At what price, we can only wonder, do all these amazing structures come?