10 Geological Wonders you didn’t know
 Published on 3/27/2009  under Cool Places  - by Gracie Murano - 461,865 views  
  The Wave (between Arizona and Utah - USA)
 The Wave (between Arizona and Utah - USA)

 A red-rock stunner on the border of Arizona and Utah, 
The Wave is made of 190-million-year-old sand dunes that have turned to rock.  This little-known formation is accessible only on foot via a three-mile hike and highly regulated.  
  Antelope Canyon (Arizona - USA)
 Antelope Canyon (Arizona - USA)

 The most visited and 
photographed slot canyon in the American Southwest, the 
Antelope Canyon  is located on Navajo land near Page, Arizona. It includes two separate,  photogenic slot canyon sections, referred to individually as Upper  Antelope Canyon --or “The Crack”-- and Lower Antelope Canyon --or “The  Corkscrew.” 
The Navajo name for Upper Antelope Canyon is Tse' bighanilini, which  means "the place where water runs through rocks." Lower Antelope Canyon  is Hasdestwazi, or "spiral rock arches." Both are located within the  LeChee Chapter of the Navajo Nation.  
  Great Blue Hole (Belize)
 Great Blue Hole (Belize)

 Part of the Lighthouse Reef System, The 
Great Blue Hole  lies approximately 60 miles off the mainland out of Belize City. A  large, almost perfectly circular hole approximately one quarter of a  mile (0.4 km) across, it’s one of the most astounding dive sites to be  found anywhere on earth. Inside this hole, the water is 480 feet (145 m)  deep and it is the depth of water which gives the deep blue color that  causes such structures throughout the world to be known as "blue holes."   
          Crystal Cave of the Giants (Mexico)
 Crystal Cave of the Giants (Mexico)

 Found deep inside a mine in southern Chihuahua Mexico, these crystals  were formed in a natural cave totally enclosed in bedrock. A geode full  of spectacular crystals as tall as pine trees, and in some cases greater  in circumference, they are a translucent gold and silver in color and  come in many incredible forms and shapes. The 
Crystal Cave of the Giants  was discovered within the same limestone body that hosts the  silver-zinc-lead ore bodies exploited by the mine and it was probably  dissolved by the same hydrothermal fluids that deposited the metals with  the gypsum being crystallized during the waning stages of  mineralization. 
  Eye of the Sahara (Mauritania)
 Eye of the Sahara (Mauritania)

 This spectacular landform in Mauritania in the southwestern part of the  Sahara desert is so huge with a diameter of 30 miles that it is visible  from space.  Called Richat Structure --or the 
Eye of the Sahara--  the 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. 
  Blue Lake Cave (Brazil)
 Blue Lake Cave (Brazil)

 Mato Grosso do Sul region in Brazil (and especially the quiet town of  Bonito) boasts many marvelous underground lakes: Gruta do Lago Azul,  Gruta do Mimoso, Aquário Natural.  The world famous "Gruta do Lago Azul” (
Blue Lake Cave)  is a natural monument whose interior is formed by stalactites,  stalagmites and a huge and wonderful blue lake. The beauty of the lake  is something impressive. The Blue Lake Cave has a big variety of  geological formation but impresses mainly for the deep blue colored  water of its inside lake.  
  Giants Causeway (Ireland)
 Giants Causeway (Ireland)

 An area of about 40,000 interlocking basalt columns, the 
Giants Causeway  is a result of an ancient volcanic eruption. Located on the north-east  coast of Northern Ireland, most of its columns are hexagonal, although  there are also some with four, five, seven and eight sides. The tallest  are about 12 meters (36 ft) high, and the solidified lava in the cliffs  is 28 meters thick in places. In a 2005 poll of Radio Times readers, the  causeway was named as the fourth greatest natural wonder in the United  Kingdom.  
  Hell Gate (Turkmenistan)
 Hell Gate (Turkmenistan)

 Called by locals 
The Door to Hell,  this place in Turkmenistan is situated near the small town of Darvaz.  When geologists were drilling for gas, 35 years ago, they suddenly found  an underground cavern that was so big, all the drilling site with all  the equipment and camps got deep deep under the ground.  None dared to go down there because the cavern was filled with gas, so  they ignited it so that no poisonous gas could come out of the hole, and  since then, it has been burning.  Nobody knows how many tons of excellent gas has been burned for all  those years but it just seems to be infinite. 
  Wave Rock (Australia)
 Wave Rock (Australia)

 The 
Wave Rock  is a natural rock formation located in western Australia. It derives  its name from the fact that it is shaped like a tall breaking ocean  wave. The total outcrop covers several hectares; the "wave" part of the  rock is about 15 meters high and approximately 110 meters long. One aspect of Wave Rock rarely shown on photographs is the retaining  wall about halfway up the rock. This follows the contours and allows  rainwater to be collected in a dam. It was constructed in 1951 by the  Public Works Department, and such walls are common on many similar rocks  in the wheatbelt. 
  Chocolate Hills (Philippines)
 Chocolate Hills (Philippines)

 Composed of around 1,268 perfectly cone-shaped hills of about the same  size spread over an area of more than 50 square kilometres (20 sq mi),  this highly unusual geological formation, called 
Chocolate Hills,  is located in Bohol, Philippines. There are a number of hypotheses regarding the formation of the hills.  These include simple limestone weathering, sub-oceanic volcanism, the  uplift of the seafloor and a more recent theory which maintains that as  an ancient active volcano self-destructed, it spewed huge blocks of  stone which were then covered with limestone and later thrust forth from  the ocean bed.
 
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