Time |
Event |
12:19a |
The countries best and worst prepared for an epidemic, according to a map from 2019. |
12:19a |
Monaco's territorial waters |
3:45a |
UK Election Projection for Great Britain - October 2025 (Full Results in Comments) | Full Results Reform: 30.4%, 301 seats Labour: 21.3%, 153 seats Conservatives: 17.2%, 51 seats Liberal Democrats: 14.0%, 71 seats Greens: 9.6%, 6 seats SNP: 3.0%, 41 seats Plaid Cymru: 0.7%, 5 seats Independents/Minor Parties: 3.9%, 4 seats Result: Reform Minority source submitted by /u/Allinallisallweare02 [link] [comments] | |
3:45a |
10 most dangerous cities in Sweden ???????? |
5:02a |
Percentage of a Country’s Total Population Living in its Most Populated City | I wasn’t able to label every country on the map, so if you have any questions please inquire in the comments. I noticed that countries with more intense climates like deserts (Persian Gulf Area) and very cold weather (Greenland, Iceland, Mongolia) tend to have more of their population living in one concentrated area. submitted by /u/SirElectrical2100 [link] [comments] | |
5:02a |
In 1995. the GDP per Capita of Japan was $44,000 - Which Countries were Lower or Higher than Japan |
6:01a |
Doggerland | At the end of the last ice age, Britain formed the northwest corner of an icy continent. Warming climate exposed a vast continental shelf for humans to inhabit. Further warming and rising seas gradually flooded low-lying lands. Some 8,200 years ago, a catastrophic release of water from a North American glacial lake and a tsunami from a submarine landslide off Norway inundated whatever remained of Doggerland. submitted by /u/Thiag8 [link] [comments] | |
6:01a |
|
6:01a |
Map showing how much alcohol people drink in every U.S. county |
6:01a |
A map so you can find Kentucky |
6:30a |
What does your country call Lays Chips |
7:52a |
Major and Active fault lines and trenches of the Philippines and the epicenter of magnitude 6.9 earthquake in Cebu |
8:18a |
Pakistan Grammatical Gender Map |
8:18a |
Urban rail systems in the world - vol. 2 | I added the cities requested. Let me know what you think. Inb4, there might be errors, the sources are not perfect but the OSM community has done a massive job mapping it anyway. submitted by /u/Perfect_Ad_1807 [link] [comments] | |
9:30a |
As of 2025, Karachi, Pakistan has the highest populated circles in the world with a 10 km radius (smaller than Malta) or a 15 km radius (smaller than Singapore) | Source - you can try it out yourself! The smaller circle has a population density of ~47,000 people per square kilometre, while the larger circle has a population density of ~28,510 people per square kilometre. If everyone in the world lived in area as densely populated the smaller circle, the entire global population could fit into Uruguay; whereas if everyone in the world lived in an area as densely populated as the larger circle, the entire global population could fit into Ecuador. submitted by /u/benjaneson [link] [comments] | |
9:30a |
Global Sumud Flotilla participants from different countries trying to get humanitarian aid to Gaza amid ongoing genocide and mass starvation |
9:30a |
Countries That Participated in the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict According to Donald Trump |
10:00a |
Venezuela Drug Traffic Zones |
11:17a |
BREAKING: One of the vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla has successfully entered Gaza's waters and is now just a few kilometres from the enclave’s shores. |
11:45a |
My attempt of drawing Europe on a map |
1:48p |
3D interactive ski resort map that shows slopes with difficulty, steep and flat sections | A friend of mine is working on a project that turns ski resorts into fully interactive 3D maps. This one shows not only slope difficulty, but also steeper areas and those flatter spots where you sometimes even have to unclip your skis/board. (Screenshot above, link in the comments if you want to try the beta or check the map.) submitted by /u/Csikojo [link] [comments] | |
2:18p |
Ethnic Kazakh population by country |
2:18p |
Average High / Low temperature in European cities in January and July |
2:18p |
|
2:45p |
Who walked out on Netanyahu's speech at the UN |
3:18p |
Uranium resources around the world |
3:18p |
Has Your Landlocked Country Ever Been Run By An Admiral? |
3:18p |
|
3:47p |
|
3:47p |
4 Countries Divided By WW2/The Cold War |
4:17p |
Ethnic Composition of the Middle East |
4:17p |
The one who made it to territorial waters |
4:50p |
Main sources of electricity around the world |
5:15p |
Italian Yearly Income per capita by Municipality 2024 |
5:45p |
[OC] Largest bloc in each precinct in the 2025 Norwegian parliamentary election |
6:17p |
European Union's Initial Humanitarian Aid 2025 |
6:17p |
The Exclaves of West Berlin [CIA, 1967] | I was looking into the exclaves of West Berlin inside of East Germany during the Cold War, and had difficulty finding a quality map. Likely the problem is that only one (Steinstücken) had more than a few year-round residents, many were small and would not be prominent on a print map of Berlin, and some of the exclaves were eliminated in 1971. Info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exclaves_of_West_Berlin_in_East_Germany Out of frustration, I decided to color-code this map which has two inset/enlarged areas to highlight smaller exclaves. It was produced by the CIA in 1967 and released in 2000. According to the report, West Berlin did not consider Eiskeller to be an exclave as it was connected by a road corridor. Steinstücken got a road corridor in 1972. submitted by /u/polyploid_coded [link] [comments] | |
6:17p |
Unemployment rates in the EU, August 2025 |
6:17p |
|
6:45p |
Australia’s climate compared to other countries |
6:45p |
Ethnic Composition of the Middle East |
7:16p |
Most Common Balkan Ancestry by State |
8:30p |
Who Needs A Visa to Enter Iran in 2025? |
9:01p |
30 years of change in Europe | I collected some data (mainly from World Bank https://data.worldbank.org) for Europe in the last 30 years and displayed to show how different countries have changed. Maps use different years to maximize the number of countries available. submitted by /u/fabio1618 [link] [comments] | |
9:01p |
Countries in support of the Trump Peace Plan for Gaza |
9:01p |
Countries where you can safely drink tap water |
9:31p |
My handdrawn map about the "Greek Plan" | The Greek Plan was a political project drawn up by the Russian Empire and Habsburg Austria in the late 18th century with the aim of dealing a mortal blow to the Ottoman Empire. The main architect of the plan was Tsar Catherine the Great, through Admiral Grigory Potemkin, who, leveraging her role as protector of Orthodox Christians under Turkish rule, supported various rebellions in Greek territory and hosted numerous exiles in Russia. The idea of Ottoman expulsion was conceived after the Seven Years' War, when, with France and Great Britain having emerged severely weakened, the Austro-Russians believed they could create their own free outlet to the Mediterranean Sea without having to submit to Turkish rule. A secret meeting between Catherine and Emperor Joseph II in Mogilev (May 1780) decided the fate of the Ottonian Empire, which would be divided among the victors: a revived Roman Empire reconstituted from the ashes of the previous one, and a new kingdom in the north, the Kingdom of Dacia, formed from the merger of Wallachia and Moldavia. The agreement, however, came to nothing. With the end of the Russo-Turkish War and the poor performance of Austria, the project fell into oblivion, partly because of a new, even more serious threat: the French Revolution. submitted by /u/Fiff02 [link] [comments] | |
10:50p |
Countries whose lowest point is higher than Denmark's highest point. | The map is an original creation by me. I wanted to make fun of the danish. Source: Wikipedia Edit: Since people have commented, Greenland is a part of the Kingdom of Denmark, a term which refers to all territories under Danish control, while I for this post chose to use the term Denmark to refer to Continental Denmark, as that is how we commonly use that here. submitted by /u/Unusual-Pumpkin-7470 [link] [comments] | |
10:50p |
Portrait of America (1939) |
10:50p |
84 years ago today began the deadly Battle of Moscow, resulting in Hitler's first major defeat and marking a major turning point in the Second World War. Each flag represents ~10,000 soldiers. |