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The rocks making up Devil’s Slide belong to what geologists call the Twin Creek Limestone. Across northern Utah, this rock ...
Deep in Arkansas woods sits a church made almost entirely of glass. Thorncrown Chapel looks like it grew straight from the ...
Most people know the Alamo, but it’s just one piece of San Antonio’s mission story. Four other missions line the San Antonio ...
Just 4 miles north of Moab, Potash Road (aka Route 279) hugs the Colorado River as it cuts through massive red cliffs. For 17 ...
The “Merc,” as locals call it, has worked as a general store, bakery, base camp, and vacation spot for over 100 years. Some ...
Ah, Florida—America’s sun-drenched wildcard. Where you can wrestle gators, fry an egg on the sidewalk, and read headlines that sound like Mad Libs on bath salts. But beyond the Florida Man legends, ...
Connecticut might be known for its colonial charm, Yale-educated brains, and fall foliage that could make a Hallmark movie jealous—but its law books? Oh, they’re hiding some certified weirdness.
Colorado: home of majestic mountains, legal weed, craft beer, and laws so bizarre you’ll wonder if they were passed at high altitude… or because of it. Nestled between ski slopes and hiking trails are ...
Stone Mountain looms over Georgia like a granite time capsule. The world’s biggest Confederate monument sits carved into its ...
Hetch Hetchy and Yosemite Valley are geological twins, carved by the same ancient ice. Kolana Rock punches 5,772 feet into ...
The most legendary hiking path in America cuts right through the park for 71 miles. The Appalachian Trail goes from Georgia ...