From a magical floating island to caves with newly discovered species, here are 9 lost worlds found on Earth!! Follow us on instagram! https://www.instagram.com/katrinaexplained/ Subscribe For New Videos! http://goo.gl/UIzLeB Check out these videos you might like: Unbelievable Animals SAVING Other Animals! 🐯https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxehUWvMr38 LARGEST Animals Ever Discovered! 🐙https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Yj7F_tPYsU Wild Animals That SAVED Human Lives! 🐻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mllqeVSsIl0 9. Mount Roraima This plateau is known as the “floating island of Venezuela” It’s remote location and indigenous folklore make it the perfect place if you are looking for adventure. As the highest formation among South America’s Pakaraima table-top mountain chain, Mount Roraima is a plateau that sits among the clouds at 9,220 feet (2,810 meters) above sea level. 8. East Scotia Ridge Located roughly 800 miles (1,287 km) east of South America’s southernmost tip in an isolated region of the Southern Ocean, the East Scotia Ridge is home to hydrothermal vents which consistently heat the water, reaching temperatures as high as 700 degrees Fahrenheit (371 Celsius). 7. Hang Son Doong Cave This enormous cave looks like the entrance to another world, and in a way it is. Life in the cave has adapted to these conditions and plants grow in some areas, reaching toward cracks of light. 6. Melville Range Rainforest In 2013, a team of scientists and filmmakers set out to explore a remote rainforest atop Australia’s Melville Range. Located on the Cape York Peninsula in the country’s northeastern region, the small, rugged, nine-mile-long (15 km) mountain range’s misty rainforest appeared in satellite imagery, prompting the researchers to go and see it for themselves. 5. Bosavi Crater Around 200,000 years ago, the cone of a now-extinct volcano in Papua New Guinea, called Mount Bosavi, collapsed, creating a 0.6-mile-deep (1 km), two-and-a-half-mile-wide (4 km) crater, which is home to its own unique, isolated rainforest ecosystem. 4. Sima Humboldt & Sima Martel Sima Humboldt, also called Sima Mayor, is a massive sinkhole located atop the 11,500-foot-tall (3,505 meters) Sarisariñama table-top mountain, or tepui, in Venezuela’s Bolívar State. (Similar to Mount Roraima). It’s situated less than 3,000 feet (700 meters) away from another enormous sinkhole known as Sima Martel. 3. Palawan Highlands Plantlife In June 2007, scientists exploring the highlands of the central Philippines discovered numerous previously unidentified species, including a large, carnivorous plant, which they named Attenborough’s pitcher plant (Nepenthes attenboroughii). 2. Movile Cave Near the Black Sea and the Bulgarian border in southeastern Romania’s Constanta County is an underground cave that has been isolated for around five-and-a-half million years. Known as Movile Cave, the site harbors a poisonous atmosphere and is completely devoid of light; yet, miraculously, it’s home to a diverse ecosystem of creatures, including scorpions, woodlice, centipedes, and other creatures who have evolved uniquely due to their isolation and living conditions. 1. Lake Vostok Over two miles (3.7 km) beneath the Antarctic ice, there’s a massive ancient lake that has spent the last 15 million years cut off from the rest of the world. It’s similar in size to Lake Ontario, but is around twice as deep. #mysterious #lost #worlds #nature #places #tourism #isolated #clouds #cliffs #beautiful #originsexplained #top10
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