Some amazing locations I found just trwaling the interent. Hope you enjoy them also, will try to post more, feel free to post your own if come across any.
Yarlung Tsangpo Canyon, Tibet and Fish River Canyon, Namibia
Many people think the Colorado Grand Canyon is the largest in the world. However, the American Geography Committee announced in 1994 that it was in fact the Great Canyon of Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) River in the Himalayas (Tibet) that claimed this title. The giant fissure descends to an astounding 5,382 metres at its deepest point and its length stretches for more than 496km. Another little-known claimant for the world’s biggest gorge is Fish River Canyon, a spectacular site in Namibia.
http://www.multimap.com/s/keQZXxUA
The Slot Canyons of Arizona, US
America’s south-west is scored with numerous sleek slot canyons, narrow fissures in the rock eroded by water and wind over the millennia. The most striking is Lower Antelope Canyon, also known as the Corkscrew, located on Navajo land near Page. Its interior changes constantly with the sun’s rays bouncing down the whirling walls.
http://www.multimap.com/s/1CMiXqML
Andean penitentes
Fields of ghostly icy figurines dominate certain plains of the high Andes, especially in Chile and Argentina. Known as penitentes (penitents), the eerily humanoid ice sculptures stand still as though in prayer. They are formed at altitudes above 4,000 metres when sunlight is reflected down into the ice blocks, causing variable melting patterns, and can reach heights of more than five metres.
http://www.multimap.com/s/jhRN6YNN
Hell’s Gate, Turkmenistan
Isolated in the middle of the Kara-Kum Desert of Turkmenistan is a strange blazing crater that has been burning non-stop for 38 years. Nicknamed Hell’s Gate, it is the entrance to an underground cavern filled with natural gas. Geologists discovered the cavern in 1971 when the ground under their drilling rig caved in. They ignited it to prevent the poisonous gas from escaping, and it has been burning uninterrupted ever since.
http://www.multimap.com/s/OA8g6CQM
Namib Desert, Namibia
In a list of famous deserts, the Namib falls pretty low. However, this is thought to be the oldest desert in the world and is also home to the planet’s most spectacular sand dunes (Dune Seven reaches as high as 380 metres, making it the world’s highest). The desert is 1,200 miles long but averages a meagre 70 miles wide.
http://www.multimap.com/s/B5Ff2ZEO
Vatnajokull glacier, Iceland
One of the biggest ice caps in the world and the largest in Europe, Vatnajokull smothers south-east Iceland in ice, covering an impressive 8% of the country and measuring around 8,100 sq km. It contains a jaw-dropping 3,300 cu km of ice. In 2008, the glacier and its immediate surroundings were also declared Europe's largest national park. And if those aren't enough records, according to Guinness World Records, Vatnajökull is the subject of the world's longest sightline – visible from an incredible 550km away in the Faroe Islands.
http://www.multimap.com/s/iTc7e1gI
Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
The so-called Avenue of the Baobabs is a remarkable collection of the huge Malagasy species of baobab, which is endemic to Madagascar. Growing up to 30 metres high, and living for up to 800 years, these trees once stood in dense tropical forest but now tower in lonely isolation. Their immense fire-resistant trunks can reach diameters of 11 metres and can store a mind-boggling 120,000 litres of water to survive through nine months of the dry season.
http://www.multimap.com/s/N94PtOER
Crystal Cave of the Giants, Mexico
Mexico's Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals) seems to have jumped straight from the pages of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth. The incredible site is home to a forest of colossal gypsum shafts spanning up to 11 metres in length and more than a metre in diameter. Buried in the mineral-rich lands of the Chihuahua region, the crystals are estimated to be more than half a million years old. The cave in which they are found sits above an intrusion of magma, the heat of which – combined with the cave's mineral-rich groundwater – allowed the crystals to form.
http://www.multimap.com/s/DarP7Hx8
Bioluminescent Bay, Vieques, Puerto Rico
This shallow, mangrove-lined cove on the south coast of Vieques is the best example of a bioluminescent bay in the world: a rare natural site in which a type of plankton that uses light as a defence mechanism flourishes. When the waters are disturbed, whether by fish, boats or people swimming, these microscopic dinoflagellates emit a trail of eerie bluish-white light easily visible at night.
http://www.multimap.com/s/CDvPzNmX
Belize Barrier Reef
While Australia’s Great Barrier Reef grabs all the headlines, the longest barrier reef in the western hemisphere is a close contender in spectacle and richness of marine life. Running for 250km off the coast of Belize, it’s also home to the astonishing Great Blue Hole – a vast, perfectly round limestone cavity and one of the most spectacular dive sites in the world. The chasm runs 145 metres under the surface and is filled with strange stalactite formations that get more impressive the deeper you dive.
http://www.multimap.com/s/DCuPyBAg
Yarlung Tsangpo Canyon, Tibet and Fish River Canyon, Namibia
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487207_8cb7413322eba4488e477f24fec9a.jpg)
Many people think the Colorado Grand Canyon is the largest in the world. However, the American Geography Committee announced in 1994 that it was in fact the Great Canyon of Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) River in the Himalayas (Tibet) that claimed this title. The giant fissure descends to an astounding 5,382 metres at its deepest point and its length stretches for more than 496km. Another little-known claimant for the world’s biggest gorge is Fish River Canyon, a spectacular site in Namibia.
http://www.multimap.com/s/keQZXxUA
The Slot Canyons of Arizona, US
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487208_12c54380484db1195088ecd2262c5e.jpg)
America’s south-west is scored with numerous sleek slot canyons, narrow fissures in the rock eroded by water and wind over the millennia. The most striking is Lower Antelope Canyon, also known as the Corkscrew, located on Navajo land near Page. Its interior changes constantly with the sun’s rays bouncing down the whirling walls.
http://www.multimap.com/s/1CMiXqML
Andean penitentes
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487229_cb0e3f6c4dc7c6be031d9c7feed2e.jpg)
Fields of ghostly icy figurines dominate certain plains of the high Andes, especially in Chile and Argentina. Known as penitentes (penitents), the eerily humanoid ice sculptures stand still as though in prayer. They are formed at altitudes above 4,000 metres when sunlight is reflected down into the ice blocks, causing variable melting patterns, and can reach heights of more than five metres.
http://www.multimap.com/s/jhRN6YNN
Hell’s Gate, Turkmenistan
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487211_39e40b8edb3b3c77602db4403953.jpg)
Isolated in the middle of the Kara-Kum Desert of Turkmenistan is a strange blazing crater that has been burning non-stop for 38 years. Nicknamed Hell’s Gate, it is the entrance to an underground cavern filled with natural gas. Geologists discovered the cavern in 1971 when the ground under their drilling rig caved in. They ignited it to prevent the poisonous gas from escaping, and it has been burning uninterrupted ever since.
http://www.multimap.com/s/OA8g6CQM
Namib Desert, Namibia
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487210_38ea5c98f7cbac1ce167b11a43a37d.jpg)
In a list of famous deserts, the Namib falls pretty low. However, this is thought to be the oldest desert in the world and is also home to the planet’s most spectacular sand dunes (Dune Seven reaches as high as 380 metres, making it the world’s highest). The desert is 1,200 miles long but averages a meagre 70 miles wide.
http://www.multimap.com/s/B5Ff2ZEO
Vatnajokull glacier, Iceland
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487228_c2429e1070efc510d5ee79f9e4828.jpg)
One of the biggest ice caps in the world and the largest in Europe, Vatnajokull smothers south-east Iceland in ice, covering an impressive 8% of the country and measuring around 8,100 sq km. It contains a jaw-dropping 3,300 cu km of ice. In 2008, the glacier and its immediate surroundings were also declared Europe's largest national park. And if those aren't enough records, according to Guinness World Records, Vatnajökull is the subject of the world's longest sightline – visible from an incredible 550km away in the Faroe Islands.
http://www.multimap.com/s/iTc7e1gI
Avenue of Baobabs, Madagascar
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487231_f824243db36485d9d58182722163ae.jpg)
The so-called Avenue of the Baobabs is a remarkable collection of the huge Malagasy species of baobab, which is endemic to Madagascar. Growing up to 30 metres high, and living for up to 800 years, these trees once stood in dense tropical forest but now tower in lonely isolation. Their immense fire-resistant trunks can reach diameters of 11 metres and can store a mind-boggling 120,000 litres of water to survive through nine months of the dry season.
http://www.multimap.com/s/N94PtOER
Crystal Cave of the Giants, Mexico
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487214_1684c08b6de8e3a2b3cfcb141c745.jpg)
Mexico's Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals) seems to have jumped straight from the pages of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth. The incredible site is home to a forest of colossal gypsum shafts spanning up to 11 metres in length and more than a metre in diameter. Buried in the mineral-rich lands of the Chihuahua region, the crystals are estimated to be more than half a million years old. The cave in which they are found sits above an intrusion of magma, the heat of which – combined with the cave's mineral-rich groundwater – allowed the crystals to form.
http://www.multimap.com/s/DarP7Hx8
Bioluminescent Bay, Vieques, Puerto Rico
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487212_45b8e2c07dc8a69de14377dc105424.jpg)
This shallow, mangrove-lined cove on the south coast of Vieques is the best example of a bioluminescent bay in the world: a rare natural site in which a type of plankton that uses light as a defence mechanism flourishes. When the waters are disturbed, whether by fish, boats or people swimming, these microscopic dinoflagellates emit a trail of eerie bluish-white light easily visible at night.
http://www.multimap.com/s/CDvPzNmX
Belize Barrier Reef
![](http://img1.pixhost.org/thumbs/84/487206_7da104a390c6684472bc3a9b2ab2.jpg)
While Australia’s Great Barrier Reef grabs all the headlines, the longest barrier reef in the western hemisphere is a close contender in spectacle and richness of marine life. Running for 250km off the coast of Belize, it’s also home to the astonishing Great Blue Hole – a vast, perfectly round limestone cavity and one of the most spectacular dive sites in the world. The chasm runs 145 metres under the surface and is filled with strange stalactite formations that get more impressive the deeper you dive.
http://www.multimap.com/s/DCuPyBAg