Every day we encounter things that seem strange to us, but in modern world there are much stranger things. If you look around, you can find many mysterious and strange places that can only be found.

Weird has always attracted people all over the world, but what exactly is weird that makes weird? An abandoned city that hasn't been inhabited for hundreds of years? Or is it an island where strange dolls live instead of people? Or, perhaps, these are abandoned amusement parks scattered around the world?

Whatever makes such places strange, this fact is beyond doubt. If you have always been interested in this topic, we invite you to learn about the 15 strangest and most unusual places located around the world!

15. Abandoned subway in Cincinnati

In the late 1990s, under the bustling streets of Cincinnati, there was a system of tunnels, from which it was decided to build a subway. Unfortunately, due to the lack of finances and the reduction in the number of residents of the city, construction was suspended, and the underground facilities turned into a lifeless space.

The subway consists of labyrinths of tunnels with turns that can confuse only the most poorly oriented people in space. This place is definitely one of the creepy abandoned as well as weird places to say the least, but the decision to completely destroy it has not yet been made.

14. The Island of Dolls

When it comes to all things creepy and weird, there is little that beats c . This place in Mexico is full of interesting stories. It is uninhabited except for the thousands of dolls that can be seen all over the island.

According to legend, a girl drowned in one of the canals of the island. After her death, they say, it would seem that dolls began to be taken out of nowhere to the shore of the island. At that time, there was a person on the island who began to hang these dolls all over the island. Since then, this place has served as a kind of monument to the deceased girl.

13. Centralia, Pennsylvania, USA


If you are a fan of the Silent Hill movie, you may have already heard about the existence of this interesting and creepy city. Once it was a crowded mining town, but since the underground fire started there, almost all the inhabitants have left it.

Less than ten people remain in the city, and the coal mines continue to burn to this day. The underground fire began in the early 1960s and, according to experts, will continue for many more years.

12. Sanzhi Resort


It usually takes a long time for a building to be completed, but in the case of the Sanzhi resort in Taiwan construction works finished much earlier than planned.

Sanzhi Resort was supposed to be a place of rest for those who want to relax and escape from everyday life. It was supposed to be the perfect place for a vacation to be spent in unusual skeet houses on the ocean.

However, due to frequent accidents and human casualties that occurred during the work, the project was decided to freeze, and the construction of houses was stopped. Today, these houses are dilapidated buildings, and locals believe that ghosts and restless souls live there.

11. Varosha


On the coast of Cyprus there is a city called Varosha, in which not a single person lives. From a distance, this city built up with houses seems noisy and lively, but upon closer inspection it turns out that there have been no people in it for a very long time.

Before the invasion of the Turkish army, Varosha was a popular tourist city, but since all its inhabitants were evacuated, no one has returned here, and it has become a ghost town with abandoned buildings, empty streets and oppressive silence.

10 Maunsell Sea Forts


In the North Sea, off the coast of Great Britain, very strange structures rise above the water, looking like huge tanks walking on the sea.

These were built for defensive purposes during World War II to resist the invading Germans. Now they are a ghostly reminder of those distant times.

9. Hill of Crosses (Kryziu Kalnas)


The place Kryziu Kalnas, which is also known as the "Mountain of Crosses", is located in Lithuania, 12 kilometers from the city of Siauliai.

According to rough estimates in 1990, about 50,000 Lithuanian crosses were installed on this unusual hill. Since then, there have been even more. One of them was even installed by Pope John Paul II during his visit in 1993, making the Hill of Crosses a real place of pilgrimage.

It is believed that whoever sets up a cross on this hill will be lucky. There are many versions of the origin of the Hill of Crosses, and one of them is based on the legend of a Catholic monastery that once stood on this hill, which went underground for unknown reasons. When one of the local residents' daughter fell ill with an incurable disease, he decided to erect a cross in a place of worship. Then a miracle happened: the girl recovered. The rumor about the miraculous power of this place quickly spread throughout the country, and people began to come here, leaving crosses on the hill for good luck.

8. Kabayan Mummy Caves


There is a place in the Philippines that many people don't know about. For most people, burying the dead underground is the best way pay the last tribute. However, the people of the Philippines have taken the burial of the dead to a new level.

Instead of burying the dead underground, they mummify them and transfer them to an artificial cave. All these mummies are considered among the best preserved in the world. Until their discovery, they remained completely isolated.

7. Oradour-sur-Glane


The destruction of cities during World War II was absolutely devastating. The Germans destroyed many houses and killed countless people, but one city still stands, a ghostly reminder of their inhuman deeds.

The French city known as Oradour-sur-Glan was one of the many cities that were burned to the ground. All that remains of the abandoned city today are ruins. It is currently an uninhabited ghost town.

6. "The door to the underworld" (Darvaza)


Darvaza, best known as the "Door to the Underworld" or the "Gate of Hell" is a gas crater in Turkmenistan, formed as a result of a failure at the site of an underground cavern discovered by geologists in 1971. It was decided to set fire to a large hole filled with gas so that gases harmful to people would not come out. The fire was supposed to die out in a few days, but the natural gas coming out of the crater is still burning.

This place has become a fairly popular tourist attraction, which is visited by many explorers, photographers and adventurers from all over the world.

5. Jacob's Well


There are many places in Texas that have become popular tourist attractions, and a deep sinkhole that goes almost 37 meters underground is one of them.

While the locals spend their holidays diving into the well from a height, divers from all over the world plunge into the depths of the karst spring, trying to penetrate the most secluded corners and openings of the natural well.

There are quite a few very sharp ledges along the edges of the well, but this does not stop desperate adventurers from trying to explore its depths. And, unfortunately, there have already been several fatal accidents in this place.

4. Leap Castle


Ireland is one of the most mysterious and beautiful places on the planet, to say the least. This country rich in history is full of amazing places, no matter where you are in Ireland.

One of the most unusual places for lovers of everything mysterious is Lip Castle. This creepy old lock, built at the end of the 15th century, has a deep history and is known for being the home of many ghosts and strange incidents. Rumor has it that a powerful evil force is roaming the halls of the castle, which is called "Elemental" ("Uncontrollable") or "It".

One more hallmark of this terrible place is a rumor that the castle was built over a pit of torture, and many of the most incredible and terrible murders took place in it.

3. Akodessewa Fetish Market


Commonly referred to as the African Voodoo Supermarket, Akodesseva is known as perfect place where you can go in search of unusual amulets and amulets. Located in Togo, the Akodesseva market is considered the world's largest amulet market.

People from all over Africa come to this market to buy strange and unusual items such as dried heads and skulls. The Voodoo religion originated in West Africa, so it is not surprising that in some markets of the continent, items for performing Voodoo rituals are sold.

2. Catacombs of Paris


Deep under the streets of Paris, there is a system of tunnels that many know as the "Catacombs of Paris". Access to the general public in these catacombs is closed for good reason, but this does not prevent individual daredevils from descending underground to see what is buried deep under Paris.

For more than 300 kilometers, a labyrinth of tunnels stretches with twists and turns that can lead to death quite quickly.

1. Hoia Baciu Forest


The strangest place on this list is occupied by the creepy and frightening forest of Hoya Bachu, located in Romania. Many people have gone missing in this forest. It is considered the "Bermuda Triangle" of all forests and is characterized by very strange features.

The appearance of UFOs and unusual electrical phenomena have been repeatedly recorded in the forest. Ghosts and strange visions have also been seen here. Those who have been to this forest say that they experience a feeling of anxiety or restlessness, dizziness and nausea in it, and someone hears someone's steps and voices.
The trees and bushes growing in the forest twisted and intertwined with each other, as if they had descended from the pages of children's fairy tales, making this place even more sinister and frightening.

Planet Earth is unique in nature.

There are many beautiful and charming places in the world that many people want to visit. But there are mysterious, unusual and mystical places.

While scientists are trying to unravel the mystery of their uniqueness, they arouse a burning interest among tourists.

So, we suggest that you familiarize yourself with the TOP 5 most mystical places on planet Earth.

5th place - Roopkund Lake, India

The glacial lake is located at an altitude of 5029 meters in the Himalayas. The alpine reservoir is called the "lake of skeletons" for the many skeletons and skulls on its shores.

It has been rumored since the late 19th century, but is believed to have been discovered by a local forester in 1942. Many believed that these remains belonged to Japanese soldiers, but numerous examinations have shown that the age of the remains is more than 800 years.

In 2004, an expedition of scientists found that human remains lie from 850 AD. DNA analysis found that the bones are divided into two parts: those belonging to people of small stature and people of ordinary stature.

The cause of their death was hail. It is suggested that, most likely, they were pilgrims to the sacred place Homkund.

4th place - Arkaim, Russia

In 1987, in the Chelyabinsk region, archaeologists discovered this mysterious city. Previously, it belonged to the ancient arches, which suddenly left it and finally set it on fire.

Arkaim is well preserved and practically not destroyed. In this place, inexplicable things are happening.

There are legends that people are healed here, and illnesses go away forever. The city consists of two circles with four entrances, according to the cardinal points.

This place is popular with tourists. It is even possible to spend the night in an open-air tent on the territory of this mystical place.

3rd place - Loch Ness, Scotland

This place gained popularity after the appearance of a mysterious animal. For the first time, a huge monster in the 20th century was seen by the McKay couple, who had a hotel nearby.

Many eyewitnesses describe him as a huge dinosaur with an outstretched neck.

An English pilot even made a film confirming its existence. Scientists have found a long cave at the bottom of this lake.

Scientists are still studying this lake, but for now a huge flow of tourists visits it every year.

2nd place - Heizhu Valley, China

The hollow of black bamboo is located in the southern region of China. The popularity of this place lies in the fact that people die and disappear here repeatedly, and accidents occur.

In 1950, a plane crash occurred here, although no malfunctions had previously been discovered. One day, an expedition team disappeared in the valley.

The leader of the detachment fell behind the rest of the participants a little and saw how a thick fog appeared around him. He was terribly scared and when the fog cleared he found that the rest of the group had disappeared.

It is believed that this anomalous zone is located on the border of the transition to a parallel world. It is worth noting that the evaporation of the roots of rotting plants, which are located in the hollow, can affect the psyche of people.

1st place - Bermuda Triangle, Atlantic Ocean

The most dangerous and mystical zone on Earth. In the Devil's Triangle, planes, ships and people disappear without a trace.

The anomalous zone got its name because it looks like a triangle, where the peaks are Bermuda, Puerto Rico and the southern cape of Florida.

Vincent Gladdis devoted an article to this place in 1964 and became the author of this phrase. Many films have been made and many books written about the Bermuda Triangle.

Skeptics argue that in this place there are no less cataclysms than in others. It is believed that the triangle is a transition to a parallel world.

But there is also scientific points perspective on events in this anomalous zone and several books have been written where the authors debunk the myths about the danger zone.

In any case, while skeptics and scientists argue, this place rightfully takes first place in the ranking of the most mystical places on Earth.

Despite the fact that abandoned cities and creepy corners of the earth terrify impressionable tourists, hundreds of travelers constantly come to these most terrible places on the planet in search of thrills.

Prague cemetery

One of such terrible places in the world is the Prague cemetery with 12 thousand ancient tombstones, which operated in the Czech Republic for four centuries. Unknown travelers found their last refuge in this cemetery, but most often, luxurious processions buried wealthy citizens. The territory of the cemetery is small, but 100 thousand dead are buried here. It is noteworthy that older burials were sprinkled with earth, then new dead were buried on top of them. Thus, about 12 tiers were formed: now travelers can observe creepy picture- the sagging earth exposed several upper "floors" with coffins and gravestones.

St. George's Church

St. George's Church is also located in the Czech Republic, in one of the tiny villages: tourists go to an abandoned temple, attracted by the unusual legend of the place. Sometime during the next funeral service, the roof over the church collapsed. Once Holy place Czech artist Hadrava decorated with numerous sinister ghost sculptures.

Mexican island of abandoned dolls

The Mexican island of abandoned dolls attracts adrenaline lovers with the exoticism of forgotten toys. In the middle of the last century, a hermit who settled here began to collect and “settle” dolls thrown into the garbage around the island. About a thousand broken and mutilated toys are tied to trees - many dolls sit on the ground or hang on branches: this is how the hermit decided to perpetuate the memory of a girl who drowned in the bay.

Chapel of Bones

The next terrible place in the world is also impressive - the chapel of bones, built many centuries ago by a Franciscan monk in one of the cities of Portugal. The small chapel contains the remains of five thousand monks. The roof and walls of the tomb are decorated with intricate inscriptions in Latin.

Paris catacombs

The world-famous Parisian catacombs are a winding system of underground tunnels with extensive caves and descents. A network of communications stretching up to 300 kilometers lies near Paris: more than 6 million people have found their shelter here.

Japanese Hashima Island

The Japanese island of Hashima is also considered the most mystical place in the world. This abandoned mining town once provided the country with coal: quarries and a mine were operating at the end of the 19th century. They came here in the hope of making money: the miners densely populated the island with their families. Almost 40 years ago, the enterprise became unprofitable, coal mines were closed. Now this island has become a popular ghost town with tourists.

Suicide forest

Jukai, the famous Suicide Forest, is located on one of the Japanese islands and went down in history as a bad place where thousands of people took their own lives. The forest initially had a bad reputation thanks to ancient legends about ghosts, and since the middle of the last century, suicides have frequented these creepy thickets. Having delved several hundred meters into the forest, along the paths you can find things - shoes, clothes, bags of the departed. Knowing how attractive the place is for people with a weak psyche, the authorities put up a warning poster with a helpline number.

Burials of fire mummies of Kabayan

Among the most mystical places in the world are also called the burial places of the fire mummies of Cabayan in the Philippines. These remains are more than seven centuries old: locals believe that the spirits of the mummified dead still live near the burials. A feature of local customs is that mummies were buried in small capsules-coffins made of wood, laying the bodies of the dead in them in the most uncomfortable poses.

Akodeseva Magic Market

At the Akodesseva magic market, which lies in the center of the capital of Togo, you can see sorcerers who still practice voodoo magic and use terrifying-looking dolls in rituals. Buyers and fans of monstrous artifacts can choose from painted skulls, magical accessories, potions and potions, dried monkey heads, hare and chicken paws, various souvenirs and local amulets.

Mental hospital

In the ranking of the scariest places in the world, tourists are attracted by the old psychiatric hospital in the city of Parma: it was once one of the most successful clinics in Italy, but over time the building fell into disrepair. A masterpiece from the object was made by an artist from Brazil, who painted the walls of the hospital with the silhouettes of patients. Ghostly figures adorn the building, conveying to rare visitors the eerie atmosphere of an abandoned Italian hospital.

Plague Island

In Italy, there is another terrifying attraction - the Plague Island in the Venetian lagoon. Since ancient times, this place has been adapted for the residence of the sick, who were exiled here from all over the country. More than 16 thousand plague victims are buried here, but the locals believe that their souls have not calmed down and still hover over the graves. The gloomy reputation of the island is also supported by legends, according to which terrible experiments were performed on the sick.

City of Centralia

Connoisseurs of the horror genre and realistic computer games they go to the American city of Centralia for special impressions: it was here that the famous horror film “Silent Hill” was filmed. This town in Pennsylvania is famous for the fact that due to an extensive fire, the population almost left these territories. The underground fire has not yet been extinguished: the atmosphere of hopelessness is emphasized by ash particles in the air above empty streets with destroyed houses.

Mountain of Crosses

The most mystical places in the world in the last century were replenished with a new attraction - the Hill of Crosses with ancient Lithuanian crosses is a creepy-looking hill that is not a cemetery at all. According to numerous legends, everyone who sets up a cross here will get good luck and change their fate for the better.

Cave in Belize

A cave in Belize attracts tourists with a strange atmosphere of the cult of the ancient Mayans. This unusual archaeological site is located near Mount Tapira and is famous for its original cathedral, equipped in one of the cave halls. Here bloody sacrifices were made for terrible deities. The Mayans also believed that it was here that the gates to the underworld open.

Chauchilla Cemetery

The Peruvian ancient cemetery of Chauchilla was also on the list of the most terrible places on the planet. Landmark of the country is located near the Nazca plateau, known to ufologists. The necropolis was discovered by scientists about a century ago. The method of burial attracted the attention of archaeologists: the dead were seated in graves, covering their bodies with a special composition. Thanks to ancient recipes, the dead are perfectly preserved: this was also facilitated by the dry climate of the Peruvian desert.

snake island

In Brazil, Snake Island is considered the most terrible place: the territory is famous for the presence of a huge number of snakes - here, on every square meter of forest land, you can find up to six dangerous and poisonous reptiles. Now tourists are forbidden to visit Queimada Grande because of the risk of being attacked by huge poisonous reptiles.

Triangle of Molebs

The Moleb Triangle was included in the rating of the most terrible places in Russia: this is a remote village in the Perm Territory, in which anomalous UFO activity was noticed. Previously, Mansi lived here, who made sacrifices to their gods on a stone plateau.

Russia also has its own exotic City of the Dead: the small Ossetian village of Dargavs is famous for its richly decorated family crypts.

Overtown Bridge

One of Scotland's bridges, Overtown, has become infamous for unexplained dog suicides. Dozens of dogs threw themselves down onto the rocks and died, and the survivors went upstairs to try again.

Hanging coffins of Sagada

The list of the most terrible places on the planet would be incomplete without the hanging coffins of Sagada - in the forest of one of the villages in the Philippines, original burial structures were arranged. The locals bury the dead by hanging them up so that the souls of the departed ancestors are closer to heaven.

Sanctuary of Tophet

In the Tunisian sanctuary of Tophet, several centuries ago, animals and children were sacrificed: such was the peculiarity of the bloody religion of old Carthage.

Unfinished subway in Cincinnati

The grandiose construction project, the unfinished subway in Cincinnati, strikes with the atmosphere of abandonment. The depot was built at the end of the 19th century, but the line was frozen for economic reasons. Now you can get to the depot several times a year, although diggers from all over the world often visit the unfinished subway on their own.

You can discover exotic and unusual places in the world, visit the most terrible corners of the planet and see any sights with your own eyes by going on a trip with travel company website. Specialists will offer a large selection of the best tours at affordable prices: you can appreciate the comfort of pre-booked hotels and get the most unusual impressions from a well-planned trip.

During the visit, the skin is covered with goosebumps from what he saw here. We will get acquainted with the most terrible places on earth further.

Old Jewish cemetery in Prague, Czech Republic

Processions in this cemetery took place for almost four centuries (from 1439 to 1787). More than 100 thousand dead are buried on a relatively small plot of land, and the number of tombstones reaches 12,000.
cemetery workers covered the burials with earth, and new tombstones were erected in the same place. On the territory of the cemetery there are places where 12 grave tiers are located under the earth's crust. As time elapsed, the sagging earth opened the eyes of the living to the old tombstones, which began to shift the later ones. The view turned out not only unusual, but also creepy.

Island of abandoned dolls, Mexico

There is a very strange abandoned island in Mexico, most of which is inhabited by scary dolls. It is said that in 1950, a certain hermit Julian Santana Barrera began to collect and hang dolls from wastebaskets, who in this way tried to calm the soul of a girl drowned nearby. Julian himself drowned on the island on April 17, 2001. Now there are about 1000 exhibits on the island.

Hashima Island, Japan

Hasima is a former coal miner's settlement founded in 1887. It was considered one of the most densely populated places on earth - with a coastline of about a kilometer, its population in 1959 was 5259 people. When coal became unprofitable to mine here, the mine was closed and the island city added itself to the list of ghost towns. It happened in 1974.



Chapel of Bones, Portugal

Copella was built in the 16th century by a Franciscan monk. The chapel itself is small - only 18.6 meters long and 11 meters wide, but the bones and skulls of five thousand monks are kept here. On the roof of the chapel is the phrase "Melior est die mortis die nativitatis" ("Better the day of death than the day of birth").

Suicide Forest, Japan

Suicide Forest is the informal name for the Aokigahara Jukai forest, located on the island of Honshu in Japan and famous for its frequent suicides. Initially, the forest was associated with Japanese mythology and was traditionally represented as the abode of demons and ghosts. Now it is considered the second most popular place in the world (the championship at the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco) to settle accounts with life. At the entrance to the forest there is a poster: “Your life is a priceless gift from your parents. Think about them and about your family. You don't have to suffer alone. Call us at 22-0110."

Abandoned psychiatric hospital in Parma, Italy

Brazilian artist Herbert Baglione made an art object from a building that once housed a psychiatric hospital. He portrayed the spirit of this place. Now ghostly figures of exhausted patients roam the former hospital.

Church of St. George, Czech Republic

The church in the Czech village of Lukova has been abandoned since 1968, when part of its roof collapsed during a funeral ceremony. Artist Jakub Hadrava populated the church with ghost sculptures, giving it a particularly sinister look.

Catacombs in Paris, France

Catacombs - a network of winding underground tunnels and caves under Paris. The total length, according to various sources, is from 187 to 300 kilometers. Since the end of the 18th century, the remains of almost 6 million people have been buried in the catacombs.

City of Centralia, Pennsylvania, USA

Due to the underground fire that broke out 50 years ago, which continues to burn to this day, the number of inhabitants decreased from 1,000 people (1981) to 7 people (2012). The population of Centralia is now considered the smallest in the state of Pennsylvania. Centralia served as the prototype for the creation of the city in the Silent Hill series of games and in the film based on this game.

Akodesseva Magic Market, Togo

The market of magic items and magical herbs Akodesseva is located right in the center of the city of Lome, the capital of the state of Togo in Africa. The Africans of Togo, Ghana and Nigeria still profess the voodoo religion and believe in the miraculous properties of dolls. The fetish assortment of Akodesseva is extremely exotic: here you can buy the skulls of cattle, the dried heads of monkeys, buffaloes and leopards, and many other equally “wonderful” things.

Plague Island, Italy

Poveglia is one of the most famous islands in the Venetian lagoon, in northern Italy. It is said that since Roman times, the island has been used as a place of exile for plague patients, in connection with which up to 160,000 people were buried on it. The souls of many of the dead have allegedly turned into ghosts, with which the island is now full. The island's dismal reputation is exacerbated by tales of horrific experiments allegedly subjected to patients in a psychiatric clinic. In this regard, paranormal researchers call the island one of the most terrible places on earth.

Hill of Crosses, Lithuania

The Hill of Crosses is a hill on which many Lithuanian crosses are installed, their total number is approximately 50 thousand. Despite the resemblance, it is not a cemetery. According to popular belief, the one who leaves the cross on the Mountain will be lucky. Neither the time of the appearance of the Hill of Crosses, nor the reasons for its occurrence can be said with accuracy. To this day, this place is shrouded in secrets and legends.

Cabayan burials, Philippines

The famous fire mummies of Kabayan dating back to 1200-1500 AD are buried here, as well as, as the locals believe, their spirits. They were made using a complex mummification process, and are now carefully guarded, as cases of their theft are not uncommon. Why? As one of the robbers said, “he had the right to do so,” since the mummy was his great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather.

Overtown Bridge, Scotland

The old arch bridge is located near the Scottish village of Milton. In the middle of the 20th century, strange things began to happen on it: dozens of dogs suddenly rushed from a 15-meter height, fell on stones and broke to death. Those that survived returned and tried again. The bridge has turned into a real "killer" of four-legged animals.

Aktun Tunichil Muknal Cave, Belize

Aktun Tunichil Muknal is a cave near the city of San Ignacio, Belize. It is an archaeological site of the Maya civilization. It is located on the territory of the Tapira Mountain Natural Park. One of the halls of the cave is the so-called cathedral, where the Mayans performed sacrifices, as they considered this place to be the Xibalba - the entrance to the underworld.

Leap Castle, Ireland

Leap Castle in Offaly, Ireland is considered one of the world's cursed castles. Its dark attraction is a large underground dungeon, the bottom of which is studded with sharp stakes. The dungeon was discovered during the restoration of the castle. In order to take out all the bones from it, the workers needed 4 wagons. Locals say that the castle is inhabited by many ghosts of people who died in the dungeon.

Chauchilla Cemetery, Peru

Chauchilla Cemetery is located about 30 minutes from the deserted Nazca plateau, on the south coast of Peru. The necropolis was discovered in the 1920s. According to researchers, bodies were found in the cemetery, which are about 700 years old, and the last burials were carried out here in the 9th century. Chauchilla differs from other burial sites in the special way in which people were buried. All the bodies are "squatting", and their "faces" seem to be frozen in a wide smile. The bodies are perfectly preserved thanks to Peru's dry desert climate.

Sanctuary of Tophet, Tunisia

The most infamous feature of Carthaginian religion was the sacrifice of children, mostly infants. It was forbidden to cry during the sacrifice, as it was believed that any tear, any plaintive sigh would detract from the value of the sacrifice. In 1921, archaeologists discovered a place where several rows of urns were found with the charred remains of both animals (they were sacrificed instead of people) and small children. The place was named Tophet.

Snake Island, Brazil

Queimada Grande is one of the most dangerous and famous islands of our planet. On it there is only a forest, a rocky inhospitable coast up to 200 meters high and snakes. For one square meter the islands account for up to six snakes. The poison of these reptiles acts instantly. The Brazilian authorities have decided to completely ban anyone from visiting this island, and the locals tell blood-curdling stories about it.

Buzludzha, Bulgaria

The largest monument in Bulgaria, located on Mount Buzludzha with a height of 1441 meters, was built in the 1980s in honor of the Bulgarian Communist Party. Its construction took almost 7 years and involved more than 6 thousand workers and experts. The interior was partly finished in marble, and the stairs were decorated with red cathedral glass. Now the memorial house is completely looted, only concrete frame with fittings, similar to a destroyed alien ship.

City of the Dead, Russia

Dargavs in North Ossetia looks like a pretty village with small stone houses, but in fact it is an ancient necropolis. In the crypts various types people were buried along with all their clothes and personal belongings.

Abandoned military hospital Beelitz-Heilstetten, Germany

During the First and Second World Wars, the hospital was used by the military, and in 1916 Adolf Hitler was treated there. After World War II, the hospital ended up in the zone of Soviet occupation and became the largest Soviet hospital outside the USSR. The complex consists of 60 buildings, some of which have now been restored. Almost all abandoned buildings are closed to access. Doors and windows are securely boarded up high boards and sheets of plywood.

Unfinished subway in Cincinnati, USA

Abandoned subway depot in Cincinnati - project built in 1884. But after the First World War and as a result of changing demographics, the need for the subway disappeared. Construction slowed down in 1925, half of the 16 km line was completed. There are now guided tours of the abandoned subway twice a year, but many people have been known to roam its tunnels alone.

Hanging coffins of Sagada, Philippines

On the island of Luzon in the village of Sagada is one of the most frightening places in the Philippines. Here you can see unusual burial structures made of coffins placed high above the ground on the rocks. There is a belief among the indigenous population that the higher the body of the deceased is buried, the closer his soul will be to heaven.

Nuclear lighthouse at Cape Aniva (Sakhalin)

The lighthouse was built with great difficulty in 1939 according to the project of the architect Miura Shinobu - it was a unique and most complex technical structure in all of Sakhalin. It ran on a diesel generator and backup batteries until the early 1990s, when it was re-equipped. Thanks to the atomic energy source, maintenance costs were minimal, but soon there were no funds left for this - the building was empty, and in 2006 the military removed two isotope installations from here that fed the lighthouse. Once it shone for 17.5 miles, but now it has been plundered and fallen into disrepair.

Eighth workshop of the Dagdiesel plant, Makhachkala

Naval weapon test station, commissioned in 1939. It is located at a distance of 2.7 km from the coast and has not been used for a long time. Construction was carried out for a long time and was complicated by difficult conditions. Unfortunately, the workshop did not serve the plant for long. The requirements for the work carried out in the workshop changed, and in April 1966 this grandiose structure was written off from the factory balance. Now this “Massiv” is abandoned and stands in the Caspian Sea, resembling an ancient monster from the shore.

Lier Sikehus Psychiatric Hospital, Norway

The Norwegian psychiatric hospital, which is located in the small town of Lier, half an hour from Oslo, has a dark past. Once, experiments were carried out on patients here, and for unknown reasons, four buildings of the hospital were abandoned in 1985. Equipment, beds, even magazines and personal belongings of patients remained in the abandoned buildings. At the same time, the remaining eight buildings of the hospital are still working today.

Gunkanjima Island, Japan

In fact, the island is called Hashima, nicknamed Gunkanjima, which means "cruiser island". The island was settled in 1810 when coal was found there. Within fifty years, it has become the most populated island in the world in terms of the ratio of land and the number of inhabitants on it: 5300 people with a radius of the island itself of one kilometer. By 1974, the reserves of coal and other minerals on Gankajima were finally exhausted, and people left the island. Today, visiting the island is prohibited. There are many legends about this place among the people.

The world is a strange, wonderful, and sometimes frightening place. We present you the most unusual places on Earth, which are the result of the whim of Mother Nature or the work of human hands.

20. Spotted Lake, British Columbia, Canada

Spotted Lake has long been revered by the Okanagan Indians, and it's easy to see why they hold it sacred. In summer, part of the lake's water evaporates, which causes small multi-colored mineral spots to form, on which you can even walk. This lake contains the largest amount of various minerals in the world.

This is the world's largest "salt pan". And when a thin film of water collects on the surface of a dried-up salt lake, it becomes the world's largest natural mirror.

Looking for the strangest places in the world? How about this terrifying lake? Animals that die in it are turned into statues through calcification. The presence of huge amounts of sodium bicarbonate ensures that all organisms that die in the lake will turn into mummies.

The next in the ranking of the strangest places on the planet is the bridge, which is famous for its unique design accuracy. The bridge itself and its reflection merge into a perfect circle, regardless of the viewing angle.

Sixty million years ago, an erupting volcano "spawned" from its bowels a mass of molten basalt, which then solidified and contracted in volume. As it cooled, cracks appeared in it, which can be seen today. This UNESCO World Heritage Site has about 37,000 polygonal columns, and they are perfectly geometric. According to local legend, they were created by the legendary hero Finn McCool, who was preparing to fight the giant Goll.

A surreal sight - a sun-drenched dead forest in a dry oasis, surrounded by rusty-orange giant sand dunes. The lack of water causes the roots of the trees to crawl out, right on the sand in search of the slightest droplets of moisture. This is a real fight for life!

At an altitude of 776 meters in the Alps, there is a charming picturesque place, in the center of which there is a small lake. But in April, a seemingly ordinary park is dramatically transformed. Powerful streams of water that roll down the slopes of the mountains fill the gorge with clean water. Benches, flower beds, bridges, lawns, trees and shrubs disappear under it. It turns out a real underwater park with a depth of 2 to 20 meters. Well, divers need somewhere to rest too.

A wonderful UNESCO World Heritage Site is located in the southwest of Turkey. This is Pamukkale (Cotton Palace), around which are the ancient ruins of Hierapolis, once a great city. Water cascades from natural springs, rich in calcium bicarbonate, flow down the white travertine terraces and form stunning thermal pools with a snow-white surface, which are unparalleled in the world.

At one of the industrial sites railway near the Ukrainian village of Klevan there is a green tunnel formed by woven branches of trees and shrubs. It seems that it was created as a decoration for some beautiful fairy tale.

There is a belief that if a couple of lovers pass through this tunnel and make a wish, then it will certainly come true.

11. Lake Hillier, Western Australia

This wonderful lake was discovered in 1802. Its intense pink color is retained all year round, which, according to some scientists, is due to the high salinity of the water, combined with the presence of salt-containing species of algae known as Dunaliella salina and pink bacteria - halobacteria.

In the waters of the rivers Thames and Mersey, the remains of sea forts built to deter German air raids during World War II stand on stilts.

After the war, a group of pirate radio operators chose the forts, and in 1967 they were expelled from there by retired colonel Paddy Roy Bates. Having occupied one of the forts - Roughs Tower - he proclaimed the creation of his own independent state called the Principality of Sealand. And so that everything was “in an adult way”, Bates took the name Roy I Bates, developed a constitution and came up with the national symbols of Sealand. He moved his family and friends to the platform, after which the legal confrontation between the "self-proclaimed king of lemurs", that is, the newly-born prince, began with the British government. And the result was not in favor of the government.

As a result, Sealand existed safely until 2006, and then, due to a short circuit in the generator and a fire, the principality burned to the ground. The restoration would have taken a huge amount, and its owner decided to put the miniature state up for sale. So far no one has bought it.

And the rest of the forts had a less eventful and bright fate. They look like an army of rusty but merciless robots decided to launch an invasion from the sea, and then stopped on the approach.

Siberia has one of the most unusual places on the planet. It is known as the "Seven Giants" and "Mansiysk blockheads". These huge stone pillars of weathering, 30 to 42 meters high, are located to the west of the Urals, on Mount Man-Pupu-ner. They were created not by human hands, but by ice and snow over the years.

The legend says that the monoliths were once giant brothers, and their leader was Torev (the Bear). Hearing about the beauty of the daughter of the leader of the Mansi, the giants went to war against the tribe in order to capture the beauty by force. But the good spirits gave the leader's son a magical weapon - a fiery sword and a shield, with which he turned the giants into stone. Dying, one of them threw aside a tambourine, which also petrified and turned into the top of Koyp ("Drum").

Lakes, as a rule, do not have a giant "drain" that sucks water into some kind of cavernous invisible drain. However artificial lake Berries is special.

When heavy rains create excessive water pressure, a hole appears in the water surface of the lake, creating a fantastically beautiful and strange failure, which you hardly want to fall into.

The unique design of the spillway, officially known as the “glory hole”, allows an excess of water equal to 1370 cubic meters to pass in one second. The depth of the drain is 21 meters.

Since 1990, a man named Ra Paulette has been taking a shovel and a pick and going into the desert in New Mexico to make caves out of pliable sandy mountains. The caves he digs by hand include underground galleries decorated with intricate patterns. They come to the mind of the creator right during the work.

"Is this Antarctic glacier bleeding?" This is a perfectly reasonable question when you look at the Taylor Glacier, just east of the Ross Ice Shelf. A red liquid flows down it, coloring the ice in its path, but there is a perfectly reasonable explanation for this. The red stuff is high-salt, microbial-laden water that has accumulated under a glacier over millions of years. As the water reaches the surface, it is saturated with oxygen, resulting in a rusty waterfall worthy of entering the top 20 strangest places on Earth.

For most people, death is a terrible and sad event. However, some believe that it is necessary to remember people who have gone to another world with a smile, and not with tears.

An example of a non-standard approach to death is a cemetery located in the Romanian village of Sepintsa. Each of the 800 multicolored tombstones is marked with a funny anecdote from the life of the person buried under it, and often contains details of his death, accompanied by a hilarious illustration.

The colors of wooden tombstones have a certain meaning.

  • Green has become a symbol of life.
  • Black has traditionally symbolized death.
  • Yellow is a symbol of fertility.
  • Red symbolized passion.

And blue was originally the dominant color chosen by artist Stan Jon Petrash, the author of the first "fun" tombstone.

Fragmentary epigraphs and bright colors make this cemetery one of the most unusual places in the world.

These beautiful travertine terraces in northern Iran are an incredible natural phenomenon that took shape at 1,840 meters above sea level over thousands of years. Travertine is a type of limestone formed from calcium deposits in running water.

The unusual reddish color of the terraces is due to the high content of iron oxide in one of the sources.

Animal figures and geometric patterns carved into the Nazca plateau in Peru are one of South America's greatest mysteries. Who created them and why? Scientists have no answer, only guesses.

Images are clearly visible only from the air or from an observation tower located next to the highway. Each of these geoglyphs (some of them up to 200 m long) is outlined with a single continuous line.

This island, separated from mainland Africa over six million years ago, looks like the setting of a sci-fi movie. The incredible and unique biodiversity of Socotra means that there are plants and trees found nowhere else in the world. The ancient and twisted dragon tree and mushroom tree look especially strange.

There is a joke that in fact the world is ruled by cats. Well, in every joke, as you know, there is only a fraction of a joke. One island the seals still managed to capture.

A short ferry ride off the east coast of Japan takes you to Tashiro Island, home to about 100 people and many, many cats.

Initially, the breeding of cats on the island was encouraged, as the locals made silk, and mice were the natural enemy of silkworms. The local fishermen believed that the fluffies brought them good luck, and the island even has a cat temple, as well as a recently built cat-shaped basin (entertainment for tourists). It goes without saying that dogs are not allowed on the island.

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