News

In 1984, an amateur paleontologist in Scotland found a remarkable specimen: a nearly complete fossil of what looked to be a ...
The coins, that tourists leave behind for love or luck, are having a devastating impact on the world-famous heritage site ...
The National Trust, which looks after the site, says the coins left between the basalt columns expand and rust, damaging the rock.
The remnants of this old Oregon Trail stage stop may not be full of ghosts, but they're full of 150 years of history.
The Giant’s Causeway formed between 50 and 60 million years ago when molten basalt erupted through chalk beds and formed a ...
Coins squeezed into the gaps in the basalt columns of the tourist attraction in north Antrim eventually rust and expand, ...
Northern Ireland’s World Heritage Site is being damaged by visitors leaving coins in the cracks of the famous stones. Scores ...
The bill to remove the coins, which are also leaving rust stains, is expected to be more than £30,000. When they rust they ...
Last year, the Giant's Causeway received about 684,000 visits. In 2019, there were nearly 1m visits, according to the BBC.
Since Icelandair launched its first nonstop flight from Nashville International Airport to Reykjavik, Iceland, earlier this year, more Tennesseans than ever are catching flights to the island known ...
Visitors are damaging Northern Ireland's Giant's Causeway, a World Heritage Site, by inserting coins into the cracks of its ...