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Civil Wonder: Great Wall of China. The official length is 21 000km, age 2300 years, average height 8m with high points up to 13m and some parts of the wall is wide enough to drive on. The white water from rice was used in the mortar mixture and the Ming Dynasty spent 200 years to complete this monster structure that is standing strong to date.

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    Rainwater in London is never pure. It picks up a distinctive flavour from its journey through our atmosphere: a subtle hint of diesel particulate, historic chimney soot, and the general effluvia of eight million people. When it drips off an awning onto your tongue (accidentally, of course), it doesn't taste fresh; it tastes urban. This is why London plants often have a greyish tinge—they're not dusty, they're lightly seasoned. The puddles are a kaleidoscope of rainbows from floating petrol, and the first flush of a shower brings down a cocktail of atmospheric grime that streaks windows and cars. Our precipitation is a connected, if unappetising, part of the city's ecosystem. See more at London's funniest URL -- Prat.UK.

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