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Tuesday, September 1, 2020

11 Mysterious Places Hard To Believe Exist




From magical mountains filled with hummingbirds to sinkholes haunted by man eating spirits, here are 11 amazing places you won’t believe exist!! 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 11. Abraham Lake, Canada Located along the North Saskatchewan River in Alberta, Canada, Abraham Lake was created in 1972 as part of the TransAlta Corporation’s construction of the Bighorn Dam. At 20 miles (32.2 km) long and occupying a surface area of 20.7 square miles (53.7 km2), it’s Alberta’s largest man-made lake, and it is famous for its unique turquoise color thanks to an influx of sediments from glacial erosion. 10. Buzludzha Monument, Bulgaria Located in central Bulgaria, the derelict Buzludzha Monument, also called the Monument House of the Bulgarian Communist Party, was built in the 1970’s. It is located high on a ridge, on a battle site in honor of fallen Bulgarian heroes. Over 6,000 people contributed to building the structure, with many students camping out helping to build the dream! 9. Valle De Cocora, Colombia This is one of the few places I’m going to tell you about that I’ve actually been to! The Cocora Valley in Colombia’s Los Nevados National Park is home to fields of the world’s tallest palm tree species, Palma de Cera (Ceroxylon quindiuense), or the Quindío wax palm which is highly endangered. 8. Red Beach, China Situated in the Liaohe River Delta in the world’s largest wetland and reed marsh, the Panjin Red Beach in Dawa County, China is a protected area that’s home to over 400 wild animals, including endangered species, and it serves as a migratory stopover for at least 260 different types of birds. 7. Devil’s Bridge, Germany While its name is admittedly unsettling, the Rakotzbrücke Devil’s Bridge in Kromlau, Germany, is paradoxically serene. Set against a backdrop of lush foliage in Kromlauer Park, the arched structure was deliberately built so that its reflection in the water below connects with the bridge to form a circular illusion. 6. Sentinels Of The Arctic, Finland Every winter, the trees in the Finnish Lapland region freeze over with ice and snow, taking on mystifying shapes and earning them a reputation as the guardians of the North. Otherworldly images of the phenomenon were taken by Italian photographer Niccolò Bonfadini, who traveled to the region and endured subfreezing temperatures of minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit (-40° Celsius) to capture his snapshots. 5. Mono Lake, California Occupying a 70-square-mile (182 km2) area at the edge of North America’s Great Basin, Mono Lake is an ancient saline lake with an abnormally high salt content measuring roughly twice as much as the ocean. Consequently, there are no fish in the lake, and its water-dwelling organisms are limited largely to brine shrimp and alkali flies. 4. The Sinkholes, Venezuela In Venezuela’s Jaua-Sarisariñama National Park, near the Brazilian border, sits a table-top mountain, or tepui, called Cerro Sarisariñama. The heavily-wooded tepui is located hundreds of miles from the nearest road, in one of the country’s most remote regions. 3. Rainbow River, Colombia Caño Cristales is a 62.1-mile (100 km) long Colombian river located in the country’s Serranía de la Macarena national park. Nicknamed the “River of Five Colors” and the “liquid rainbow,” it boasts vivid colors along the riverbed, including red, yellow, green, blue, and black, from June to November, the moderate months between the extreme dry and wet seasons. 2. Koekohe Beach, South Island, New Zealand A series of spherical grey boulders resembling dinosaur eggs, known as the Moeraki boulders, dot the coastline along Koekohe Beach on New Zealand’s South Island. The large rocks are known as septarian concretions, which are hard, compact masses of matter that form when mineral cement fills spaces between particles in soil or sedimentary rock. 1. Socotra, Yemen Located in the Indian Ocean between Somalia and Yemen, Socotra is an archipelago so isolated that a third of its wildlife is found nowhere else on Earth, including plant and animal species that died out long ago elsewhere. The territory, which is governed by Yemen, sits 60 miles (97 km) north of the Horn of Africa at the entrance to the Gulf of Aden.

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