10 Alien-Looking Places on Earth
 Published on 4/30/2009  under Cool Places  - by Gracie Murano - 395,830 views  
TAGS: alien on earth   
  Dry Valleys (Antartica)
 Dry Valleys (Antartica)

 Antarctica's 
Dry Valleys,  with their barren gravel-strewn floors, are said to be the most similar  place on Earth to Mars. Its fascinating landscape, located within  Victoria Land west of McMurdo Sound, get almost no snowfall, and except  for a few steep rocks they are the only continental part of Antarctica  devoid of ice. The terrain looks like something not of this Earth; the  valley’s floor occasionally contains a perennially frozen lake with ice  several meters thick. Under the ice, in the extremely salty water, live  mysterious simple 
organisms, a subject of on-going research. 
  Socotra Island (Indian Ocean)
 Socotra Island (Indian Ocean)

 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. 
  Rio Tinto (Spain)
 Rio Tinto (Spain)

 The giant opencast mines of 
Rio Tinto  create a surreal, almost lunar landscape. Its growth has consumed not  only mountains and valleys but even entire villages, whose populations  had to be resettled in specially built towns nearby. Named after the  river which flows through the region-itself named for the reddish  streaks that colour its water-Rio Tinto has become a landscape within a  landscape. The river red water is highly acidic (pH 1.7—2.5) and rich in  
heavy metals. 
         Kliluk, the Spotted Lake (Canada)
 Kliluk, the Spotted Lake (Canada)

 In the hot sun of summer, the water of 
Spotted Lake,  located in British Columbia and Washington, evaporates and crystallizes  the minerals, forming many white-rimmed circles: shallow pools that  reflect the mineral content of the water in shades of blues and greens. It contains one of the worlds highest concentrations of minerals:  magnesium sulphate (Epsom salts), calcium and sodium sulphates, plus  eight other minerals and traces of four more, including silver and  titanium.  
The Indians soaked away aches and ailments in the healing mud and waters. One 
story cites a truce in a battle to allow both warring tribes to tend to their wounded in the Spotted Lake, "Kliluk".  
  Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia)
 Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia)

 Bolivia's Salar de Uyuni is perhaps one of the most spectacular  landscapes in the world. A magnificent area with an impressive salt  desert (the world's largest), active volcanoes, tall cacti islands and  geyser flats, it exists like an alien mirage, something completely  out-of-this-world. Oddee's crew went there in July 2008, be sure to 
check it out. 
  Vale da Lua (Brazil)
 Vale da Lua (Brazil)
 Vale da Lua
 Vale da Lua (Moon Valley) is a water eroded rock 
formation with 
natural swimming pools,  placed on a river in the brazilian cerrado forest. Located at Chapada,  38 km from Alto Paraíso de Goiás, it’s rock formations are one of the  oldest on the planet, made of quartz with outcrops of 
crystals. 
(Photo by: Alex) 
  Blood Pond Hot Spring (Japan)
 Blood Pond Hot Spring (Japan)

 Blood Pond Hot Spring is one of the "hells" (jigoku) of Beppu, Japan,  nine spectacular natural hot springs that are more for viewing rather  than bathing. The “blood pond hell” features a pond of hot, red water,  colored as such by iron in the waters. It’s allegedly the most  photogenic of the nine hells. 
(Photos: L Plater and phototravel). 
  The Stone Forest (China)
 The Stone Forest (China)

 The 
Shilin (Chinese for 
stone  forest) is an impressive example of karst topography. Its rocks are  made of limestone and are formed by water percolating the ground’s  surface and eroding away everything but the pillars. It’s known since  the Ming Dynasty as the 'First Wonder of the World.' 
  The Richat Structure (Mauritania)
 The Richat Structure (Mauritania)

 This spectacular landform in Mauritania in the southwestern part of the Sahara desert, called the 
Richat Structure, is so huge with a diameter of 30 miles that it is visible from space. The formation was originally thought to be caused by a meteorite impact but now 
geologists believe it is a product of uplift and erosion. The cause of its circular shape is still a mystery. 
  Eisriesenwelt Ice Caves (Austria)
 Eisriesenwelt Ice Caves (Austria)

 Ice caves are very different from normal caves. They have a strange  feeling about them, as though they are not from this planet, and one has  just temporarily stepped into their world when spelunking their depths.   
There are many ice caves throughout the world, but the 
Eisriesenwelt Ice Caves  in Austria are some of the largest known to man. They are located  within the Tennengebirge Mountains near Salzburg and stretch for a  remarkable 40 kilometers. Only a portion of the labyrinth is open to  tourists but it's enough to get a taste of what the remaining network is  like: a truly mesmerizing palate of Mother Nature's handicraft.
 
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