Will Treece
7 Different Seven Wonders of the World
by Will Treece - July 28, 2010 - 11:19 AM

You’ve heard of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. But the lure of list-making has inspired plenty of people in the modern day to compile their own lists of wonders. Here are seven of them.

1. The Seven Wonders of the USA

Just this month, AOL Travel announced the winners of a voting contest for the Seven Wonders of the USA – and the open voting process resulted in a number of unusual choices of Wonder. While an Honorable Mention went to the Statue of Liberty, the Longaberger Home Office building in Newark, OH – a building shaped like a shopping basket – made the list. Other surprising inclusions were the Coronado Performing Arts Center (Rockford, IL), the Government Bridge (Rock Island, IL), and the Biltmore (Asheville, NC), as well as the more traditional Mt. Rushmore, Yellowstone National Park, and Gateway Arch.

2. Seven Wonders of the Underwater World

CEDAM international, a society for scuba diving and marine conservation, announced their list of Seven Wonders of the Underwater World in 1989. They presented their list of Wonders as a list of areas that needed protection: Palau, the Belize Barrier Reef, the Northern Red Sea, deep-sea vents, the Galapagos Islands, Lake Baikal, and the Great Barrier Reef (pictured—image credit: Richard Ling).

3. The New7 Wonders

The most famous list of new Seven Wonders is the global voting contest sponsored by the New7 Wonders Foundation. From 2001 to 2007, people voted for their favorite wonders online or by text worldwide, with over 100 million votes cast. The Pyramids of Giza were given honorary membership, and the final list contained Chichen Itza, the statue of Christ the Redeemer, the Colosseum, the Great Wall of China, Machu Picchu, Petra, and the Taj Mahal.

4. The Seven Wonders of the Modern World, 20th-Century Engineering Edition

In 1994, the American Society of Civil Engineers put together a list of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World that celebrated incredible feats of engineering from the 20th century. The list includes older like the Panama Canal and the Empire State Building, as well as more recent structures like the Chunnel. The CN Tower, Golden Gate Bridge, Itaipu Dam, and Netherlands North Sea Protection Works round out the list.

5. Popular Mechanics’ Seven Wonders of the Modern World

In 1912, Popular Mechanics conducted an “International Poll of Scientists” in order to create a new list of Seven Wonders of the Modern World. With a wag of the finger, the magazine noted that the original list of Seven Wonders of the Ancient World included “not a single one created for the uplifting or well-being of the masses.” The list seems to be a product of the scientific advancements of the early 20th century with the spirit of Progressive Era reform behind it; it includes wireless telegraphy, the telephone, the aeroplane, radium, antiseptics and antitoxins, spectrum analysis, and the x-ray.

6. The Seven Fortean Wonders of the World

Easily the most eccentric list comes from the Charles Fort Institute, a society for skeptics whose interests veer toward the unorthodox and paranormal. They sponsored an online voting contest to determine the greatest of “history’s uber-mysteries.” The final list contained Bigfoot/Yeti, the Shroud of Turin, the Piri Reis Map, UFOs, Oak Island, Crop Circles, and Nazca. I didn’t know what several of these were myself; you can check out the shortlist of candidates here, with descriptions.

7. The New7 Wonders of Nature

One of the most exciting lists of seven wonders is being compiled now: the New7 Wonders of Nature. Run by the same Swiss folks who put together the New Seven Wonders, they’re using the tried-and-tested method of a global voting system to determine the seven most wondrous natural structures in the world. The winners will be announced in November 2011, so be sure to get your votes in before then. Even if you aren’t going to vote, it’s a fun website to browse around – had you ever heard of the Jeita Grotto?
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Interestingly enough, not a single Wonder is on this list twice. Did any of these lists get it right? What would be in your top seven?

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Comments (14)
  1. Being from Newark, I twitch every time I see the basket. I know more than one middle aged lady who has spent her retirement savings on a serious basket habit…

  2. Hey, nice to see a blogger from that area of Ohio. I grew up in the Mount Vernon area and agreed on the basket comment. Great article by the way. My fave is probably The New7 Wonders.

  3. I’ve seen a list of the 7 Natural Wonders of the World. Don’t have it on me at the moment.

  4. Love this list of lists (especially the Coronado – gorgeous).

    Is that an editor’s note I spy at the end of number 4?

  5. Ha! Good eye, Rachel.

  6. I live in Niagara Falls, Canada and have no idea why people come from all over to see a hole in the ground.

  7. I drive past the basket every day on my way to work from Dublin to the Coshocton area and back. I have to say it would probably scare the crap out of someone who didn’t know it was coming driving down 16, especially in the fog. On the days when it is pretty foggy the thing kind of sneaks up on you. It is cool, but the baskets Longaberger makes are an enormous waste of $!

  8. What about Carhenge!

  9. It’s not a shopping basket, it’s a pic-a-nic basket! Smarter than the average bear.

  10. If you ever get a chance to watch the BBC documentary mini-series ‘Seven Wonders of the Industrial World’, take it.

  11. What? No 7 Wonders of the Plastic Surgery World? Bride of Wildenstein, Heidi Montag, Pamela Anderson…

  12. I checked out the list for #1. Most of the comments surround whether the statue of liberty is in New York or New Jersey. It’s pretty hillarious. I’m going to guess that a lot of said commentors are from those states.

  13. Awesome post, I love it to bits!

    That picture of the wicker bag building is insane.

  14. There’s an amazing iPhone and iPad app, Wonderful Planet, what a wonderful World! with the new wonders of the World finalists:

    http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/wonderful-planet-what-wonderful/id392502875?mt=8

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