Original photo by Peter Hermes Furian/ Shutterstock |
In the Diomede Islands, you can cross from one day into another. | Seeing into the future is supposed to be impossible. But if you travel to the Diomede Islands of the Bering Strait, the impossible becomes reality. The Diomedes consist of two remote islands, Big Diomede (part of Russia) and Little Diomede (part of Alaska). They're only 2.4 miles apart, but the international date line runs in between them. That means that when you're in the Alaskan fishing village of Little Diomede and looking at your Russian neighbor, you're actually gazing into tomorrow. It's no wonder these landmasses have been nicknamed the Yesterday and Tomorrow islands.
Today, Big Diomede has no permanent population (except a few observation posts), whereas Little Diomede has a population of around 100 people, mostly Native Alaskans. Native people long passed freely between these two islands, even after the U.S. bought Alaska from Russia in 1867, but things changed with the Cold War. That's when the "Ice Curtain" (a reference, of course, to the "Iron Curtain" of the Soviet era) came down between the two islands. Since then, travel between Big and Little Diomede has been strictly forbidden, even though ice in the winter forms a land bridge between them, making it theoretically possible to walk into the next day. |
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| For a few hours every day, three different days occur on Earth at the same time. | |
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For a few hours every day, three different days occur on Earth at the same time. | | |
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