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24 of the world's most unusual landscapes

24 of the world's most unusual landscapes

Yahoo22-04-2025
While there are plenty of awe-inspiring man-made destinations around the globe, nothing is as creative as nature.
From trees that resemble monsters, to colorful sinkholes, towering rock formations and waterfalls of molten lava, these are some of the most unusual and fascinating landscapes in the world.
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Gnarled and twisted over centuries, the yew trees of Kingley Vale could have been lifted straight from a Gothic fairy tale. Some are believed to be the oldest living things in Britain, dating back 2,000 years.
Yew tree groves were decimated in the 15th century, their wood used for longbows, making this stand of trees truly unique.
The Fairy Chimneys of Cappadocia in central Turkey are a geological marvel.
The hard basalt columns are the result of the surrounding, softer rock eroding over thousands of years, creating towers that appear otherworldly.
What makes them truly special, however, is the cave systems and cities dug out beneath them by persecuted early Christians and used whenever invaders passed along nearby trading routes.
On the wild north Atlantic Coast of Northern Ireland, Giant's Causeway is the stuff of actual legend.
The story goes that it was created by the giant Finn McCool to face off against his Scottish rival Benandonner, and destroyed by the latter as he retreated home.
While the reality is a touch less fantastical, it's no no less amazing. The pillars are the result of lava cooling and contracting over millions of years.
Sister formations can be found at Fingal's Cave in Staffa, Scotland, all part of the same lava flow.
The large, spherical Moeraki Boulders could easily be mistaken for man-made creations that have washed up on Koekohe Beach on the North Otago coast.
Local Maori legend claims they are the remnants of fishing baskets and fruits that came ashore when their Araiteuru Canoe was wrecked bringing their ancestors to New Zealand's South Island.
In truth, these two-meter-high stones were created by mudstone hardening over five million years, before appearing as surrounding rocks were eroded.
At 300 meters wide (984 feet) and around 125 meters deep (410 feet), the Great Blue Hole is the biggest sinkhole in the world.
Part of the Belize Barrier Reef System, the hole was formed as sea levels rose thousands of years ago, flooding its deep caves.
Made famous by renowned marine explorer Jacques Cousteau, recent submarine trips have created new 3D sonar maps, showing never-before-seen mineral formations close to the hole's bottom.
In the brief period between Colombia's wet and dry seasons, the waters of Caño Cristales become a riot of red, yellow and green.
This vibrant occurrence is due to Macarenia clavigera, a plant found on the riverbed.
It only turns red between September and November, which is after the fast-flowing water of the wet season abates, but before the dry season evaporates too much water for it to keep its colorful look.
Swimmers are allowed in certain sections, but can't wear sunscreen in order to protect the fragile ecosystem.
Dead Vlei, literally dead marsh, sits among the tallest sand dunes in the world, with some as high as 400 meters.
Once abundant, the now almost barren area is home to a vast stand of dead Camel Thorn trees, dried out because of an intense change in climate 900 years ago.
The dry weather means they cannot decompose, creating a truly eerie landscape.
The rolling Chocolate Hills of Bohol in the Philippines could easily be mistaken for a child's landscape drawing.
But these 1,268 hills are very much a natural phenomenon: conical limestone peaks formed through the actions of water and erosion over thousands of years.
Their name derives from their grass covering, which turns brown during the dry season, with December to March the best time to visit. Legend has it the hills are the dried tears of a heartbroken giant. While the truth is more prosaic, the views are still spectacular.
The most active volcano on the island of Hawaii, Kilauea is in a state of near constant eruption, molten lava oozing down roads and destroying homes and holiday resorts.
After a three-month hiatus in activity, it sprang back into life in late 2024, drawing tourist crowds to see dramatic spouts of bright orange lava reach over 90 meters (300 feet).
Believed to be between 210,000 and 280,000 years old , it surfaced above sea level on the southern eastern shore of the island around 100,000 years ago.
Just a few meters from the sand and surf on the coast of Middle Island, in Australia's Recherche Archipelago, Lake Hillier's brash pink water is in stark contrast to the bright blue of the nearby ocean.
Its color is thought to be derived from algae called Dunaliella salina, which produces a pigment that turns the salty water a seemingly unnatural hue.
Halophilic bacteria in the salt crusts that surround its banks are also considered to be behind the phenomenon.
Protruding high from the prairie into the Wyoming sky, Devils Tower (the apostrophe omitted ever since it was given the name in the 19th century) is sacred to several Native American tribes.
A butte rising some 385 meters above the Belle Fourche River, it was formed by surrounding sedimentary rocks eroding, leaving the igneous rocks to stand sentinel over the area.
The Lakota believe Devils Tower rose to protect two girls from a chasing bear, the marks surrounding the tower left by its claws.
Sci-fi aficionados will recognize it as the alien rendezvous point from Steven Spielberg's 1977 movie 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind.'
With temperatures averaging a blistering 94 degrees Fahrenheit, Dallol is one of the most inhospitable places on Earth.
Close to the border with Eritrea, its ethereal, Martian landscape sits within the Danakil Depression.
Besides its ungodly heat, Dallol is best known for its colorful hydrothermal fields, with aquamarine green pools and yellow rocks appearing like a surrealist painting against the florid red rock formations.
The bright colors are due to inorganic iron oxidation.
Known also as the Richat Structure, the Eye of the Sahara looks pretty much like any other part of this continent-straddling desert from the ground. But from up in space, this 40-kilometer (24-mile) wide geological marvel is something else.
Believed to be an eroded dome, rather than an impact crater, it resembles a fossilized ammonite when seen from Earth's orbit.
High in Japan's northern Tohoku region, Mount Zao is home to this vast swathe of icy sculptures. As winter comes on hard and harsh, Siberian winds blow across the Zao range and snow falls and freezes on the mountain's trees.
The trees then freeze into interesting forms, resembling creatures straight out of a manga comic.
Regular light shows help add to their allure after dark, although a cable car across their peaks in daylight is just as fascinating.
The clue's in the name of this vast area in northern Argentina: lunar landscapes of wind blasted rock, where the night skies are illuminated by billions of stars and the moon glows.
Also known as the Ischigualasto Provincial Park, its most famous sights include The Sphinx, which resembles its Ancient Egyptian namesake.
There's also The Mushroom, a tower that blooms out into a wide formation at its summit and the Bowling Field, where spherical rocks dot the landscape.
Just south of the Utah state line, Vermilion Cliffs is one of the most visually arresting places in the United States.
The area's swirling sandstone canyons and arches are ripe for exploration, with few visitors likely to be encountered.
The vast cliffs themselves, which run for 48 kilometers and range between 2,000 and 3,000 feet, can be seen in all their glory from Highway 89A.
Iceland's geothermic wonders make it a paradise for seekers of weird and wonderful landscapes, especially following a bout of increased activity in late 2024.
Most famous for its Geysir and Strokkur erupting hot springs, this vast area, 60 kilometers east of Reykjavik, is worth taking time to explore, especially as there's a handy campsite close by.
Mentions of the bubbling, geothermal fields here date back to 1294, when they were activated by an earthquake.
Norway's Trollkirka Caves, literally Troll Church Caves, aren't places of worship in the traditional sense. Instead, they're marble and limestone marvels that intrepid visitors can enter after a strenuous hike.
The key attraction here is the 70-meter main cave, which boasts a waterfall. Smaller grottoes play home to sparkling pools, the water bright and clear against the white rock, which appears to have folded in on itself over millions of years.
Far less popular than nearby Grand Canyon National Park, Bryce Canyon is arguably every bit as extraordinary.
It appears red, white and yellow against the bright blue sky thanks to the 'hoodoos' that stand to attention for miles in every direction.
These columns, made of soft rock at the bottom and harder rock at the top, are the result of millennia of weathering and erosion. They sit within a series of huge natural amphitheaters that look spectacular at sunset.
The lowest point on Earth, the Dead Sea is more than nine times saltier than the sea.
Thought to be part of a rift zone that extends north into Turkey, it's believed to have once been part of a lagoon connected to the Mediterranean.
Salt deposits on its bottom ensure that bathers remain buoyant, while the water's rejuvenating properties have made it a go to for health tourists for centuries.
In the heart of British Columbia, Spotted Lake looks like your average body of freshwater during winter. But as temperatures rise and the water evaporates, it becomes something wholly different.
Huge blue, yellow and green spots appear, the result of deposits of magnesium sulphates, sodium sulphates and calcium.
The Okanagan First Nations people believed the spots to have different curative properties and have owned the surrounding land since 2001.
Flowing from Antarctica's Taylor Glacier, Blood Falls' ghoulish color is rooted in deep time.
In 2017, scientists discovered the scarlet hue is due to oxidized iron in brine saltwater, which has taken one and a half million years to get to the falls, rather than discoloration by algae as previously thought.
When the water makes contact with oxygen, it oxidizes and turns red.
A brine lake underneath the glacier, exposed to iron rich rocks, is believed to be the water's source.
The 'Rainbow Mountains' of the Zhangye Danxia Landform Geological Park are striking examples of what millions of years of geological activity can do to a landscape.
Made up of layers of sandstone, mudstone and multicolored sedimentary rocks laid down over millions of years, their sharp tilt is due to the movement of the tectonic plates which also formed the Himalaya.
River erosion helped form the deep gorges and high peaks, with purple, green, yellow and red strata creating a brash and bright vista.
Known by locals as the Door to Hell, the Darvaza Gas Crater is a natural phenomenon brought about by man less than half a century ago.
While searching for oil, Soviet engineers discovered a natural gas pocket that soon collapsed, consuming their equipment.
Panicked by the release of methane potentially killing wildlife in the surrounding Karakum Desert, scientists set the gas crater alight in the hope it would soon burn out.
Today, it still burns brightly, to a depth of 30 meters, although some observers say its flames are diminishing. It's still a major draw for tourists heading to this little-visited country in Central Asia.
This story was originally published in June 2019. It was updated and republished in April 2025.
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In 2019, Royal Portrush hosting Open was huge for Northern Ireland. This year, it'll be bigger
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USA Today

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  • USA Today

In 2019, Royal Portrush hosting Open was huge for Northern Ireland. This year, it'll be bigger

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Tourist coins pose giant problem at N. Ireland's famous causeway site
Tourist coins pose giant problem at N. Ireland's famous causeway site

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time3 days ago

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Tourist coins pose giant problem at N. Ireland's famous causeway site

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Want to try a long-distance hike in the UK? Make it one of these
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National Geographic

time3 days ago

  • National Geographic

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This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK). Few nationalities have an appetite for long-distance walks quite like the British. Even on an island prone to seaborne storms — where spring can segue directly into autumn and where upland visibility can extend no further than an outstretched hand — countless anorak-clad souls tramp a substantial network of long-distance paths: from the South West Coast Path riding atop the granite cliffs at Land's End in Cornwall, to the Cape Wrath Trail ending at a lonely lighthouse in the Scottish Highlands. Long-distance rambling in Britain is part of a correspondingly long tradition. In one sense, the activity began here in 1965 with the unveiling of the Pennine Way — a 268-mile route along the spine of Northern England, connecting Derbyshire fells with the Scottish border, and celebrating 60 years in 2025. 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It's also a motherland of Welsh language and culture, and by tracing its shores you get a sense of the wider Welsh coastline in miniature. There are mighty castles such as the medieval stronghold at Beaumaris; soaring lighthouses like those at South Stack and Penmon; and pretty, pastel-hued seaside towns like Menai Bridge and Rhosneigr. But most of all this route is about beaches. Anglesey claims the finest in Wales — crescents of sand wide open to Irish Sea winds, where the incoming tide laps at your walking boots. The beaches are varied: mostly muddy and pebbly in the south east; wide and spectacular in the south west; small and secluded in the north. Another appeal of this path is its accessibility — the peaks of Eryri (Snowdonia) may reign on the southern horizon, but the route itself is fairly level. You'll also be richly rewarded for your efforts at a number of accomplished restaurants along the trail, often making the most of Welsh lamb and the island's highly prized sea salt. The 135-mile long Anglesey Coastal Path laps an island known as 'The Mother of Wales' because produce from its fertile fields once fed the mainland. Photograph by Pearl Bucknall / Alamy Stock Photo 1. Traeth Porth Wen The northern coast of the island is the quiet and relatively undiscovered side of Anglesey, the shoreline Swiss-cheesed by little coves. Here, the coast path skirts eerie, little-visited Traeth Porth Wen, where the abandoned chimneys and kilns of a Victorian brickworks — inactive for a century — rise over a quiet, pebbly beach. Wander among the roofless structures, listening to the hush of the waves. Close by you'll find the pretty village of Cemaes, huddled around a small harbour and with a number of cafes. 2. Penmon The rockpools here mark the easternmost point of Anglesey. Presided over by a sullen black-and-white lighthouse, this headland offers panoramic sea views: out to the uninhabited Ynys Seiriol (known in English as Puffin Island), once a retreat for Christian hermits and now a habitat for grey seals. The island is out of bounds to humans, who can only gaze at it wistfully from the shore or else circumnavigate it on a boat trip. 3. Menai Bridge The historic Menai Suspension Bridge links Anglesey to the mainland, swooping over the whirpools of the Menai Strait. Set where the bridge lands on the island, the town of Menai Bridge is a gastronomic centre. Among the stars here are much-loved tapas joint Freckled Angel and seafront bistro Dylan's. You'll need to clean off your boots to dine at Sosban & the Old Butchers, where Michelin-starred tasting menus are only revealed on arrival. Plas Newydd's woodlands are a rare redoubt of red squirrels in Britain outside Scotland. You'll find a squirrel hide in the grounds. Photograph by Hazel McAllister / Alamy Stock Photo 4. Plas Newydd Take a detour off the path on the southeast coast to enter this National Trust estate, whose woodlands are a rare redoubt of red squirrels in Britain outside Scotland. You'll find a squirrel hide in the section of the grounds close to the Menai Strait; the creatures are most active in autumn, but can be seen year round. There's plenty else beside the resident rodents: terraced Italianate gardens, a secret treehouse and of course a grand stately home, containing one of the UK's largest murals, painted by Rex Whistler. 5. Llanddwyn The most celebrated beach in Anglesey (and possibly all of Wales) lies on the west coast: Llanddwyn, a sandy strip fringed by pine forests. It culminates at a tidal island, capped by a row of whitewashed pilots' cottages, easy to walk to on all but the very highest spring tides. Llanddwyn Island was reputedly the home of St Dwynwen, the Welsh equivalent of St Valentine; look out for her holy well, where legend tells that fishes spell out messages to lovestruck pilgrims through bubbles. 6. Barclodiad y Gawres This Neolithic burial chamber is set on the island's west coast, perched on a headland protruding into the Irish Sea breakers. The grassy mound is one of the most important prehistoric sites in Wales — inside, archaeologists have found evidence of a millennia-old stew containing eel, frog and grass snake. It's a fine place to have a more conventional picnic in the present day, pondering the passage of time as gulls wheel overhead. Construction of Hadrian's Wall began in 122CE, but the route was in some way plotted some 300 million years earlier with the emergence of the Whin Sill. Photograph by Peter Greenhalgh ( / Alamy Stock Photo Itinerary 2: Hadrian's Wall Path Start point: Brampton End point: Corbridge Distance walked: 42 miles Average length: Four days Construction of Hadrian's Wall began in 122CE, but the route was in some way plotted some 300 million years earlier with the emergence of the Whin Sill: a volcanic outcrop across the neck of Northern England, atop which Roman engineers cannily plonked their defences. Today, the Hadrian's Wall Path runs for 84 miles from the Solway Firth to where the Tyne ebbs out into the North Sea. But its most spectacular portion lies at the centre: where the path rises from green fields to crest these volcanic crags, and where Roman fortifications are at their most intact. From this blustery escarpment you can gaze across the parapet to the Caledonian frontier as Roman sentries did, and idle at 'milecastles' — watchtowers along the path, where you might find yourself alone with the ghosts of the vanished legions. Along the way you can find characterful pubs and villages in which to rest, as well as stargazing centres that make the most of the pristine conditions of the Northumberland International Dark Sky Park. Easy access is assured by the little bus that shuttles up and down the path: the wonderfully named AD122. Along the way you can find characterful pubs and villages, as well as stargazing centres that make the most of the pristine conditions of the Northumberland International Dark Sky Park. Photograph by Getty Images 1. Lanercost Priory It may not date back to Roman times, but Lanercost Priory is one of the great landmarks on the western reaches of the wall: a 13th-century monastery distinguished by its extraordinary vaulting. These days, it's a point of pilgrimage — in part for the adjoining tearoom in the old abbey farm, where walkers can fortify themselves for the miles ahead with the likes of Cumberland sausage, mash and gravy. 2. Gilsland The pretty village of Gilsland guards the western rampart of Walltown Crags — a fine spot to stop before striking out on the march along the escarpment. As well as cafes and pubs, you can explore the Roman Army Museum, where exhibits include the only Roman helmet crest ever to be discovered, which looks a little bit like a Mohican. 3. Twice Brewed Inn The most renowned pit stop on the path is this pub, in business since at least the 18th century, set roughly at the halfway point of your walk. As well as guest rooms named after Roman emperors and hearty pub food, the inn has its own microbrewery and a stargazing centre with telescopes (plus a planetarium on hand for overcast nights). 4. Housesteads Britain's most complete Roman fort can be found at Housesteads, guarding the edge of an empire that stretched from this rainy frontier to Africa and Arabia. It's set beside the path: wander among the foundations of gatehouses, barracks and the bathhouses where troops would have warmed numb limbs after a long shift on the wall. 5. Carrawburgh Mithraeum One of the most mysterious spots along the wall is the Carrawburgh Mithraeum — the remains of an underground temple at the eastern end of the escarpment, towards the end of the hike. In the third century, Roman soldiers gathered here to worship the god Mithras, most famously depicted as sacrificing a sacred bull. The nearest hub is Newcastle, which has trains to Brampton Station (around a 30-minute walk from Brampton town) and Corbridge. The 685 bus links central Brampton to Corbridge via Haltwhistle (the midpoint of this route). The AD122 bus links some stops along the Hadrian's Wall Path. Macs Adventure offers a six-day walking holiday between Brampton and Corbridge from £599, including baggage transfers and B&B accommodation along the route. Published in the July/August 2025 issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK). To subscribe to National Geographic Traveller (UK) magazine click here. (Available in select countries only).

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