Cementerio de Trenes – Uyuni, Bolivia
Cementerio de Trenes is situated just outside of the city of Uyuni, best known for its salt flats. Uyuni in southern Bolivia is perhaps best known for its mesmerizing salt flats. But just a couple of miles outside of the
Tunnel of Love – Klevan, Ukraine
The Tunnel of Love (Ukrainian: Туне́ль Коха́ння, Tunel Kokhannya) is a section of industrial railway located near Klevan, Ukraine, that links it with Orzhiv. It is a railway surrounded by green arches and is three to five kilometers in length. It
Salar de Uyuni – Potosí, Bolivia
Salar de Uyuni (or Salar de Tunupa) is the world's largest salt flat at 10,582 square kilometers (4,086 sq mi). It is located in the Daniel Campos Province in Potosí in southwest Bolivia, near the crest of the Andes and
Stokksnes – Hofn, Iceland
Stokksnes is a headland on the southeastern Icelandic coast, near Hofn and Hornafjördur. There is a light house on the tip of the land. One of the first settlement farms in Iceland was Horn, built by Hrollaugur Earl of Møre in Norway.
Red Seabeach – Panjin, China
Red Seabeach, located in Dawa County, Panjin, Liaoning, China, is famous for its landscape featuring the red plant of Chenopodiaceae, Suaeda salsa. It is based in the biggest wetland and reed marsh in the world. The landscape is composed of
Pancake Rocks – Punakaiki, New Zealand
The Pancake Rocks are a very popular tourist goal at Dolomite Point south of the main village. The Pancake Rocks are a heavily eroded limestone area where the sea bursts through several vertical blowholes during high tides. Together with the
Cheltenham Badlands – Caledon, Ontario
Cheltenham Badlands is a small example of Badlands formation in Caledon, Ontario. The site is located on the southside of Old Base Line Road (between Ontario Highway 10 and Creditview Road/Peel Regional Road 12) and features exposed and eroded Queenston
Bardenas Reales – Spain
The Navarre Bardenas are a natural semi-desert of some 42,000 ha that covers southeast of Navarra (Spain). The soils are clay, chalk and sandstone and have been eroded by water and wind creating surprising ways in which they emphasize the