Most Amazing Places That Look Out of This World
Our planet Earth has many strange and often beautiful places that retain the power to inspire and mystify. They remind us that even in this age of technical and technological marvels there are still amazing places to be discovered. Here are some of our favorite alien-like landscapes on earth:
The Spotted Lake
 
The Giant's Causeway
Pamukkale
McMurdo Dry Valleys
 
Lencois Maranhenses
Rio Tinto
Our planet Earth has many strange and often beautiful places that retain the power to inspire and mystify. They remind us that even in this age of technical and technological marvels there are still amazing places to be discovered. Here are some of our favorite alien-like landscapes on earth:
The Spotted Lake
Spotted Lake is a saline endorheic  alkali lake located northwest of Osoyoos in British Columbia and is very  highly concentrated with numerous different minerals.
In  the summer, most of the water in the lake evaporates leaving behind all  the minerals. Large “spots” on the lake appear and depending on the  mineral composition at the time, the spots will be different colors. The  spots are made mainly of magnesium sulfate, which crystallizes in the  summer. Since in the summer, only the minerals in the lake remain, they  harden to form natural “walkways” around and between the spots.
Spotted Lake contains some of the highest quantities in the world of magnesium sulfate, calcium and sodium sulphates.
The Giant's Causeway
The Giant's Causeway is an area of  about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the result of an ancient  volcanic eruption. It is located in County Antrim, on the northeast  coast of Northern Ireland.
Legend has it that the Irish  warrior Fionn mac Cumhaill (Finn McCool) built the causeway to walk to  Scotland to fight his Scottish counterpart Benandonner. One version of  the legend tells that Fionn fell asleep before he got to Scotland. When  he did not arrive, the much larger Benandonner crossed the bridge  looking for him. To protect Fionn, his wife Oonagh laid a blanket over  him so he could pretend that he was actually their baby son. In a  variation, Fionn fled after seeing Benandonner's great bulk, and asked  his wife to disguise him as the baby. In both versions, when Benandonner  saw the size of the ‘infant', he assumed the alleged father, Fionn,  must be gigantic indeed. Therefore, Benandonner fled home in terror,  ripping up the Causeway in case he was followed by Fionn.
The Giant's Causeway is today  owned and managed by the National Trust and it is the most popular  tourist attraction in Northern Ireland.
Pamukkale
The strange and weirdly beautiful  terraced pools of Pamukkale have been appreciated for over two millennia  and yet still remain a little known wonder of the world.
Thousands of years ago  earthquakes, which are common in Turkey, created fractures that allowed  powerful hot springs to bring water rich in calcium carbonate to the  surface. As the water evaporated the chalky material condensed and  formed layer-upon-layer of Travertine and thus slowly built up the walls  over time in the same way that a stalactite forms in a cave.
Apparently Pammakale means  Castle of Cotton but the Greco-Romans built a town above it called  Heirapolis – meaning “Holy City” or “Sacred City”. They too recognised  it as a rare and important place attributing healing powers to the  milky-white waters.
McMurdo Dry Valleys
The McMurdo Dry Valleys are a row of  valleys in Antarctica located within Victoria Land west of McMurdo  Sound. The terrain looks like something not of this Earth. The region  includes many interesting geological features including Lake Vida and  the Onyx River, Antarctica's longest river.
The valley's floor occasionally  contains a perennially frozen lake with ice several meters thick. It is  also one of the world's most extreme deserts Under the ice, in the  extremely salty water, live mysterious simple organisms, a subject of  on-going research.
Scientists consider the Dry Valleys perhaps an important source of insights into possible extraterrestrial life.
Socotra Island
This  island simply blows away any notion about what is considered “normal”  for a landscape on Earth, you'd be inclined to think you were  transported to another planet - or traveled to another era of Earth's  history.
Socotra  Island, which is part of a group of four islands, has been  geographically isolated from mainland Africa for the last 6 or 7 million  years. Like the Galapagos Islands, the island is teeming with 700  extremely rare species of flora and fauna, a full 1/3 of which are  endemic.
The  climate is harsh, hot and dry, and yet - the most amazing plant life  thrives there. Situated in the Indian Ocean 250 km from Somalia and 340  km from Yemen, the wide sandy beaches rise to limestone plateaus full of  caves (some 7 kilometers in length) and mountains up to 1525 meters  high. The trees and plants of this island were preserved thru the long  geological isolation, some varieties being 20 million years old.
Lencois Maranhenses
Located in the State of Maranhão, on  the north shore of Brazil, the Lençóis Maranhenses National Park is an  area of about 300 square kilometers (155,000 ha) of blinding white dunes  and deep blue lagoons, forming one of the most beautiful and unique  places in the world. The dunes invade the continent over 50km (31 miles)  from the cost, creating a landscape that reminds a white bed sheet,  when seen from above.
Lençóis Maranhenses looks like  an archetypal desert. In fact it isn't actually a desert. Lying just  outside the Amazon basin, the region is subject to a regular rain season  during the beginning of the year. The rains cause a peculiar  phenomenon: fresh water collects in the valleys between sand dunes,  spotting the desert with blue and green lagoons that reach their fullest  between July and September.
The area is also surprisingly  home to a variety of fish which, despite the almost complete  disappearance of the lagoons during the dry season, have their eggs  brought from the sea by birds.
Rio Tinto
The vast mines of Rio Tinto give a  hypnagogic, almost martian landscape. Its growth has consumed not only  mountains and valleys but even entire villages.
This river has gained recent  scientific interest due to the presence of extremophile aerobic bacteria  that dwell in the water. The extreme conditions in the river are  analogous to other locations in the solar system thought to contain  liquid water, such as subterranean Mars.
Río Tinto is notable for being very acidic (pH 2) and its deep reddish hue. It is metal solvent and surely not human-friendly!





















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
