the world's tallest man-made structure was the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, which held the position for over 3800 years until the construction of Lincoln Cathedral in 1311.
AgRyan04 said:
You listening to the same podcast I just finished?
ChucoAg said:
Man-made…. Sure
Texas Yarddog said:
This one blew my mind:l when I first heard it:
Galileo could have taught at Harvard.
Until then, I always thought Galileo was further back in time.
I've been down a rabbit hole since I posted that above. Yes to the first and yes to the second.Jabin said:
Wasn't the Grosvenor Square Embassy the only US embassy in the world located on land that the US did not own?
Also, the Grosvenor family is one of the wealthiest families in Great Britain, so their loss of their US holdings after the Revolution apparently did not set them back too badly.
YokelRidesAgain said:
In the 1920s and 1930s there was a daredevil named Ray Woods who made himself famous by diving from high points, mainly bridges. He successfully jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge three times and the Aurora Bridge in Seattle, among others. His last jump, from the Oakland Bay Bridge, went badly wrong and he was seriously injured, but survived.
In 1942 he drowned in a river after falling into the water from a fishing boat.