Oddity Central |
- North Sentinel Island – The World’s Hardest Place to Visit
- Iowa Businessman Poses as Homeless, Rewards Generous Passers-By
- Indonesian Volcano Spews Hauntingly Beautiful Blue Lava
North Sentinel Island – The World’s Hardest Place to Visit Posted: 09 Jan 2014 04:55 AM PST It's hard to believe that there are people in this world who have no idea about the internet or cell phones. These are tribes that are completely cut-off from global civilization and do not welcome any kind of contact from the outside world. North Sentinel Island, a part of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal Ocean between Myanmar and Indonesia, is home to one such tribe. The Sentinelese people are so hostile to external contact that the island has been dubbed the 'hardest place to visit' in the world. The Sentinelese are thought to be direct descendants of the first humans who emerged from Africa. They have lived on the tiny island for almost 60,000 years. Their exact population is unknown; it could be as low as 40 or as high as 500.
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Iowa Businessman Poses as Homeless, Rewards Generous Passers-By Posted: 09 Jan 2014 03:55 AM PST This Christmas, a businessman from Iowa came up with a very creative way of giving. Posing as a homeless person, Jonnie Wright gave away envelopes of cash to all the people who showed him kindness. On December 24, Wright stood at a street corner for four hours, in the bitter cold, in the Des Moines suburb of Johnston. He gave away about 50 envelopes, a total of $1,000 in cash. Five of them contained $100 bills and the rest, $10 bills. All the envelopes came with a letter of appreciation as well. One of the recipients of the envelopes was a Des Moines resident, Rob Taylor. The letter informed him that the 'bum' he just handed money to wasn't homeless, but a successful businessman giving back to good people.
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Indonesian Volcano Spews Hauntingly Beautiful Blue Lava Posted: 09 Jan 2014 03:00 AM PST There are plenty of natural treasures hidden away in the most unsuspecting places on Earth. One of them is an Indonesian sulfur mine, Kawah Ijen, that produces stunning, spectral blue lava. The images of this mine are so breathtaking, I could just stare at them for hours. Kawah Ijen is a part of the Ijen volcano complex – a group of stratovolcanoes in East Java, Indonesia – with an active crater that's 200 meters deep. The complex is also home to the world's largest turquoise-colored acidic lake, full of sulfuric acid. The lake is a sulfur mining site; miners carry sulfur-laden baskets by hand from the crater floor. The miners work at night to double their meagre income, but they don't have to worry about the dark. Kawah Ijen, an ordinary rocky crater by day, transforms into a stunning display of electric blue light at night.
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