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The world's weirdest 14 tourist attractions are absolutely eye-opener.

 
[Free Tour]     02 Feb 2018
If every trip is a wonder hunt, you will find that while every city you travel has strange things, there are always some novelty that makes you feel amazing about nature.

If every trip is a wonder hunt, you will find that while every city you travel has strange things, there are always some novelty that makes you feel amazing about nature.

Let's take a look at the weirdest spots in the world. It doesn't scare you!


New Zealand | Firefly Cave |

The Waitomo cave area in Waikato, New Zealand, is decorated with a variety of stalactites and stalagmites and fireflies. Thousands of fireflies glowed in the cave, sparkling like stars. Waitomo Cave this characteristic is also called "firefly cave".


Turkey | Cotton Castle |

The bunker of cotton flowers is perhaps the most extraordinary place to take a bath. This terrace-shaped place in southwestern Turkey looks snow-capped, but in fact the deposit was formed after years of hot springs. For more than two thousand years, it has been a very popular SPA center.


Us | Wave Valley |

Waves Valley is located on the Colorado Plateau on the border between Utah and Arizona in the United States, where the mountain rocks are relatively soft quartz sandstone, and the wind is very strong, after hundreds of millions of years of wind erosion, It was only at last that the curve of the waves was chiseled out of the sandstone. Only 20 people can visit the valley every day. Due to the limited quota, visitors are said to have to make an appointment seven months in advance.


New Zealand | Apple Rock |

There are many interesting rocks in Abel Tasman National Park on the southern island of New Zealand, but the weirdest of them is the split apple rock, which stands high in the waters of Tasman Bay. The huge rock split neatly in the middle, as if someone had deliberately cut it off with an axe.


America | Devils Tower |

The Devil Tower seems to be a supernatural phenomenon where locals believe aliens landed in 1977. Although scientists are not sure how the behemoth was formed, they believe the rock is not from an alien planet.


U.S. | Runway Desert |

If you are a rock in the desert, do you wish you could walk around? Perhaps the talc in the Dead Valley thought the same way, leaving an obvious trace in the course of the walk. As for how the stone moves, no one knows, perhaps only the stone itself.


U.S. | Bonneville Saline Plains |

If you think the Great Salt Lake is salty, go north a little and take a look at the Bonaville Saline Plains. The 30,000 acres of saline land here are five feet thick. It is estimated that the salt here weighs 5 million tons.


Northern Ireland | Giant Cape |

Irish legend suggests that Giant Cape was built by mysterious warriors, but in fact it does not look like a masterpiece of nature, but it is. Giant promontory was formed by many basalt columns under ancient volcanism.


Egypt | White Desert |

The name of the white desert comes from chalk, which stands high in the desert and is eroded by sandstorms in different shapes, such as mushrooms, spires, spikes, and so on.


Yemen | Socotra Island |

Socotra Island, at the entrance to the Gulf of Aden, is perhaps the strangest place in the world. And the weirdest is the dragon tree, which looks like a big spinach, resin is dark red, like red blood.


Philippines | Chocolate Mountain |

There are a lot of limestone hills on the Philippine island of Baohe, which are covered with grass like a green carpet, but during the dry season, the grass turns brown and looks like chocolate.


Belize | Big Blue Hole |

The big blue hole, which is 1000 feet in diameter and 400 feet deep, looks like it's going to suck people in, but it's a very gentle giant. Tourists swim with fish every day, and many believe it is one of the best deep-water diving sites in the world.


Azerbaijan | mud volcano |

In the Caspian Sea of Azerbaijan, there are more than 300 mud volcanoes, all mini volcanoes. This strange geological phenomenon is usually a gentle injection of mud, but 2001 of an eruption from Baku, the capital, reached a height of 50 feet!


Maldives | Star Sea |

A distant view of the sea of stars on Vaadhoo Island, Maldives, seems to mirror the stars in the sky. Bioluminescence in water is actually a marine microorganism called phytoplankton. The effect of the night on the shore is absolutely amazing, like a fairy tale scene!

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