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John Collins carried the Olympic Flame through Marble Arch Caves on a boat, navigating the underground river on its way to the London Olympics.
UNESCO: Olympic torch carried through iconic Geopark
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Much of Dublin's early history is as murky as the peaty basin where the River Liffey joined the now-underground River Poddle, near the site of what is today the Dublin Castle gardens.
BBC: Dublin's Viking heritage
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The channels will not feed into the Yellow River, but will pass under the river in specially built underground channels.
NPR: River Has Long Reflected China's Glories, Sorrows
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Thirty-five Harvard colleagues and I are at the Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, India, a mass pilgrimage in which tens of millions of Hindus gather to bathe at the confluence of the sacred Ganga (Ganges) River, the Yamuna River, and the mythical underground Saraswathi.
FORBES: Why a Harvard Finance Instructor Went to the Kumbh Mela
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Locals blamed earthquakes, local salt mines, an underground river and wind turbines in the past.
WSJ: Canadians Make a Racket Over Mysterious 'Windsor Hum'
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Former Mayor Ed Koch had a bridge over the East River named after him, but it's not looking like the same honor will extend underground.
WSJ: MTA Brings to a Screeching Halt Idea of Honoring Koch at a Station
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They found waste 12 to 20 feet underground emitting radiation in doses "we've never encountered" near the river.
WSJ: Toxic Radioactive Find Adds to Hanford Cleanup Woes
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Debris from the swollen River Thames has caused problems to the water cooler for the generating station which powers London Underground.
BBC: Weather and travel latest
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As visitors descend underground into the museum, they'll see the slurry wall, the bedrock that held back the Hudson River when the towers collapsed.
CNN: Creating 9/11 memorials a slow process
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Pike River Mine Chief Executive Peter Whittall said the latest tests had shown there was still heat being given off underground.
BBC: New Zealand mine: Fears grow for trapped UK miners
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Mr Simplot himself, an avowed lover of skiing, duck shooting and the great outdoors, was attacked in the 1970s for his support for new coal-fired electricity plants along the Snake river and for a scheme to generate hydro-power by diverting water from another river into a vast underground tube.
ECONOMIST: Jack Simplot