Most of the world's data travels via ocean cables that are at risk of frequent sabotage. DW explains where they lie and how they are protected.
More than 8,000 years ago, Great Britain was connected to mainland Europe by a landmass known as Doggerland. It stretched ...
Cartographers and geographers. Two professions that normally don’t get a lot of ink. Folks working in those careers ...
Far North Queensland has been put on flood watch, with heavy rainfall expected to hit parts of the region, including the ...
The world's largest invertebrate remained hidden from humanity until a tantalising glimpse 100 years ago. But it would be ...
Lanzarote An island perfectly suited to a geologist, a poet or indeed an artist! For Lanzarote has such an awe-inspiring setting: ...
Here’s the latest on park plans on a small but important piece of land near the intersection of Battery Creek and the ...
Canada's musicians provide many new vacation ideas for U.S. travelers, recommending beloved destinations and sites that are ...
Liberal MP Churence Rogers is retiring from federal politics. He's served Bonavista—Burin—Trinity since 2017. (CBC)In most ...
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said that a Russian bomb destroyed the school building "even though dozens of civilians were there". The school is located in a part of Kursk held by Ukrainian ...
What the visiting journalists weren’t told—nor were many of the soldiers living at the station, which could house up to ...
Africa is broken. It is being dissected by the famous East African Rift which extends over a length of 5000 km along the eastern side of Africa and seems poised to destroy Africa as we know it.