Category: Uncategorized
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The Kalahari Desert
The Kalahari Desert is a vast semi-arid sandy region in southern Africa that stretches across Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa, covering roughly 900,000 square kilometers. Despite its name, the Kalahari is not a true desert in the strict climatic sense; it receives more rainfall than most deserts and supports a surprising variety of plant and…
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Armenia: Ancient Highlands at the Crossroads of Empires
Armenia is a landlocked country in the South Caucasus region of Eurasia, situated at the crossroads of Eastern Europe and Western Asia. It is bordered by Turkey to the west, Georgia to the north, Azerbaijan to the east, and Iran to the south. Despite its relatively small size, Armenia has a rich cultural heritage, dramatic landscapes, and…
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The Pioneer of the Age of Exploration
Long before satellites mapped every coastline and aircraft stitched continents together in hours, the world still contained vast blank spaces. Medieval maps showed dragons where knowledge ended. The ocean, particularly the Atlantic, was not merely water — it was a boundary between the known and the unimaginable. Into this uncertainty stepped Prince Henry the Navigator.…
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Guests on Earth
The Quixotic Institute for Global Futures In the modern world, ownership is one of our most powerful ideas. We own land, houses, forests, and oceans—at least on paper. Maps divide the planet into borders, and legal systems transform landscapes into property. The language of possession has become so normal that we rarely question it. Yet…
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The 2,000 Islands of Estonia
long the Baltic coast of Estonia lies one of Northern Europe’s most fragmented and fascinating shorelines. The country has over 2,000 islands, scattered across the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Finland. Most are small, forested, and sparsely populated, but together they form a distinct maritime landscape that has shaped Estonian culture for centuries. Geography…
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Cabinda — The Oil-Rich Exclave Cut Off from Angola
Cabinda is a small but geopolitically significant exclave of Angola located on the Atlantic coast of Central Africa, separated from the rest of Angola by a strip of territory belonging to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Although physically detached, Cabinda remains an official province of Angola and plays an outsized role in the country’s…
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Lake Urmia
Lake Urmia is a vast hypersaline lake in northwestern Iran, located between the provinces of East Azerbaijan and West Azerbaijan, not far from the Turkish and Armenian borders. Historically it was the largest lake in the Middle East and one of the largest salt lakes on Earth. Geography At its historical maximum, Lake Urmia stretched…
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The Roof of a Country
A QuixoticGuide Reflection on Highpointing Every country has a highest place. Sometimes it is obvious — a towering volcano or a jagged alpine summit visible from hundreds of kilometers away. Sometimes it is barely noticeable: a grassy hill, a quiet ridge, a plateau where the wind moves through tall grass and nothing marks the altitude…
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Yap and Colonia: Where Money Is Stone and Time Moves Slowly
n the western Pacific, far from the busy shipping lanes and aviation corridors that stitch the modern world together, lies Yap — an island where the most famous form of money cannot fit in your wallet. The island’s capital, Colonia, is small enough that you might walk through it in half an hour. A few…
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Panj River: The Natural Border Between Tajikistan and Afghanistan
The Panj River is one of Central Asia’s most remarkable frontier rivers. Flowing for about 1,125 kilometers, it forms the natural border between Tajikistan and Afghanistan, carving its way through the dramatic landscapes of the Pamir Mountains. The river begins where the Wakhan River and Pamir River meet in Afghanistan’s remote Wakhan Corridor, a narrow…