The most mystical places on earth. The most terrible and mystical places on the planet

A selection for lovers of natural and historical mysteries, as well as for those who simply appreciate beautiful unusual places. Welcome to 65 corners of the planet that make you think about the irrationality of the world, feel like an explorer and get a dose of adrenaline.

Easter Island, Chile

Easter Island, Chile

This small piece of land in Pacific Ocean(area - 163.6 km², population - about 6,000 people) is known throughout the world thanks to the mysterious stone idols - moai. Almost nine hundred statues stand around the perimeter of the island, like sentinels. Who made them? How were multi-ton blocks moved? What function did the statues serve? Europeans have been puzzling over these questions for decades. And although it is believed that Thor Heyerdahl solved the riddle, local residents they still believe that the moai contains the sacred power of the ancestors of the Hotu Matu’a clan.

Aokigahara, Japan

Aokigahara, Japan

This is a dense forest at the foot of Mount Fuji on the island of Honshu. The place is ominous: rocky soil, tree roots entwined with rocky debris, there is a “deafening” silence, compasses do not work. And although scientists (seemingly) have found explanations for all these phenomena, the Japanese believe that ghosts live in the forest - the souls of frail old people who were left there to die in times of famine. Therefore, during the day of Aokigahara - popular place rest, and at night - a “haven” for suicides. Books and songs have been written about this place, films have been made, including documentaries.

Racetrack Playa, USA

Racetrack Playa, USA

In California's Death Valley National Park there is a dry lake that would be ordinary if not for a phenomenon that scientists have been puzzling over for years. 30-kilogram stones move along its clay bottom. Slowly, but without the help of living beings. The blocks leave behind long, shallow furrows. Moreover, the trajectory of their movement is absolutely arbitrary. What pushes stones? Different versions were voiced: the specifics of the magnetic field, wind, seismic activity. None of the guesses has received sufficient scientific substantiation.

Roraima Plateau, Brazil, Venezuela, Guyana

Roraima is a mountain on border of three countries But its top is not a sharp peak, but a luxurious, cloud-shrouded plateau with an area of ​​34 km², with unique plants and picturesque waterfalls. This is exactly how Arthur Conan Doyle imagined " lost World" According to Indian beliefs, Roraima is a petrified tree trunk that gave birth to all the vegetables and fruits on the planet. The Indians also believed that gods lived there, so no one climbed to the top before the arrival of Europeans. Modern travelers say that on Roraima people are simply filled with sacred delight.

Valley of the Jars, Laos

Valley of the Jars, Laos

At the foot of the Annam ridge, giant pots are “scattered”: up to three meters in height and weighing up to six tons. Archaeologists suggest that the jars are about two thousand years old, but they cannot understand how the ancestors of modern Laotians used them. Laotian legends say that these are utensils of giants who lived in the valley. They also say that King Khung Trung ordered the jugs to be made in order to prepare a lot of rice wine and celebrate the victory over the enemies. Historians have their own versions: rainwater could be collected in pots or food could be stored in them. Or maybe they were funeral urns?

Bermuda Triangle

Bermuda Triangle

In the Atlantic Ocean, in the “triangle” between Florida, Bermuda and Puerto Rico, there is an anomalous zone where over the last hundred years more than a hundred sea and aircraft. The most famous case occurred in 1945. Five Avenger bombers took off from a US Navy base and disappeared. The planes that went in search of them also disappeared without a trace. Skeptics say that shoals, cyclones and storms are to blame. But many tend to believe in more mystical versions: for example, in abduction by aliens or inhabitants of Atlantis.

Shilin, China

Shilin, China

In Yunnan province, the “Stone Forest” spreads over an area of ​​350 km². Ancient rocks, caves, waterfalls and lakes create the atmosphere fairy world. According to legend, one young man decided to save the people from drought and build a dam. The wizard gave him a whip and a rod to cut and move blocks of stone. But the instruments had magical powers only until dawn. The young man did not finish the work, and the huge monoliths remained scattered throughout the valley. Scientists believe that 200 million years ago in place “ Stone forest"There was a sea. It dried up, but the rocks that amaze with their grandeur and beauty remained.

Glastonbury Tower, UK

In the English county of Somerset there is a 145-meter hill topped by the tower of the medieval church of St. Mikhail. According to legend, there was an entrance to Avalon - the other world where holy people, fairy-tale creatures and magicians were born, where special laws of time and space operate. King Arthur and his wife Guinevere were buried on this hill - in 1191, the monks of Glastonbury Abbey allegedly found sarcophagi with their remains. This is not the only legend about St. Michael's Hill and King Arthur. Perhaps these are just myths, but visitors to the attraction claim that the hill has powerful energy.

Whale Alley, Russia

Whale Alley, Russia

On Chukchi island Itigran is an ancient Eskimo sanctuary. Huge whale bones and skulls are buried in the frozen shore. The alley was opened in 1977, but its mysteries have not yet been solved. There is an assumption that in the 14th century this place was used by whalers for ritual meetings. Judging by the many “meat pits,” the gatherings were accompanied by feasts, and the holes in the tops of the whale “pillars” indicate that the whalers may also have played games, hanging prizes on bones. But in folklore there is no information about the purpose of the alley. But there is a legend about the battle of “flying shamans” that took place there.

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Fly Geyser, USA

Fly Geyser, USA

It’s hard to believe, but this “fountain,” as if straight from the pages of a science fiction writer’s book, is not on Jupiter, not on Mars, but on Earth, in the state of Nevada. The “flying” geyser spews jets of hot water to a height of up to 15 meters, forming a “mini-volcano” of mineral deposits around itself. Scientists claim that this is what the surface of our planet looked like millions of years ago. The geyser is located on the territory of a private ranch, and to admire it, you need permission from the owner. But this does not stop tourists. People believe that if you wash your face with geyser water, life will become bright and happy.

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Richat, Mauritania

Richat, Mauritania

In the western Sahara there is the “Eye of the Earth”. These huge circles, drawn by an unknown force, really resemble an eye. The Richat structure is the oldest geological formation, the age of one of the rings is about 600 million years. The “Eye” is clearly visible from space; in orbit it is used as a landmark. There are different versions about the nature of this formation. For example, that this is a crater from a meteorite fall or a landing site for aliens. But the most scientific hypotheses suggest that this is the crater of an extinct volcano or the result of erosion on an uplifted section of the earth’s crust.

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Nazca Lines, Peru

Nazca Lines, Peru

The Nazca Plateau, like a canvas, is covered with giant patterns. A hummingbird, a monkey, a spider, flowers, a lizard, geometric shapes - in total there are about 30 neat designs made in the same style in the valley. Geoglyphs on the Nazca plateau were discovered almost a century ago, but scientists are still arguing about who, how and when created them. Some believe that this is an ancient irrigation system, others that these are the “holy paths of the Incas,” while others claim that this is the oldest astronomy textbook on Earth. There is also a completely mystical version that the lines are a message from aliens. There are many theories, but none have been scientifically confirmed.

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Podgoretsky Castle, Ukraine

Podgoretsky Castle, Ukraine

The 17th-century palace in the village of Podgortsy, Lviv region, would be an ordinary historical landmark (a perfectly preserved, striking example of Renaissance architecture, the place where D’Artagnan and the Three Musketeers was filmed) if it were not for the anomalies noticed there. According to legend, one of the owners of the castle, Vaclav Rzhevuski, was terribly jealous of his beautiful wife Maria. So much so that he walled her up within the walls of the palace. The caretakers of Podgoretsky Castle claim that they have seen the ghost of the “White Lady” more than once and constantly hear the clicking of heels on the marble floor.

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Devils Tower, USA

Devils Tower, USA

Devil's Tower, or Devil's Tower, is a columnar mountain in the state of Wyoming. It resembles a tower assembled from individual columns. It's hard to believe that this is a creation of nature and not human hands. The indigenous population treated the tower with awe, because strange light phenomena were observed many times at the top. There is a legend that the devil sits on the top and beats a drum, causing thunder. Because of its bad reputation, climbers avoid the mountain. But she appears in Steven Spielberg’s film “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” - this is where the meeting with aliens takes place.

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Gaiola Islands, Italy

Gaiola Islands, Italy

IN Gulf of Naples, off the coast of Campania, there are two small islands wondrous beauty. A bridge connects them together. One of them is uninhabited, the other has a villa built on it. But no one lives in it - the place is considered cursed. All its owners, as well as some members of their families, died under strange circumstances, went bankrupt, and ended up in prisons and psychiatric hospitals. Due to their bad reputation, the islands have no owner and the villa is abandoned. Only occasionally do brave tourists, photographers and journalists visit Gaiola.

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Bran Castle, Romania

Bran Castle, Romania

In the picturesque town of Bran stands a majestic 14th-century castle. According to legend, Count Vlad III Tepes-Dracula often spent the night here. This man became the prototype of the most famous vampire in pop culture. The count was given the nickname “Dracula” for his incredible cruelty: he killed innocents for fun, took blood baths, could impale a person and eat in the presence of a corpse. The people hated and feared him. Bran Castle is currently a working museum. It is believed that although Vlad III did not live there permanently, the place is imbued with his negative aura.

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Catatumbo River, Venezuela

Catatumbo River, Venezuela

In the place where the Catatumbo River flows into Lake Maracaibo, a unique atmospheric phenomenon is observed: almost every night the sky is illuminated by lightning without thunder. There are over a million discharges per year. Lightning can be seen hundreds of kilometers away. Scientists have discovered the cause of the phenomenon, but its extraordinary beauty still gives rise to superstitions and legends. In 1595, Catatumbo lightning saved the city of Maracaibo. Pirate Francis Drake decided to capture the city, but because of the lightning, local residents saw his ships approach from afar, managed to prepare and fought back.

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Body, USA

Body, USA

In California, on the border with Nevada, there is a ghost town named after gold miner William Bodie. In 1880, the city had a population of 10,000. They accounted for 65 saloons and 7 breweries, they even had their own “red light district” - crime, drunkenness and debauchery flourished in the city. When the gold rush died down, people left. Now it is a historical park. But tourists do not come to Bodi because of their interest in history: the city is considered a haven of ghosts. Anyone who takes even a stone from there will be haunted by misfortune. Park rangers constantly receive packages with the return of “souvenirs”.

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Troll Tongue, Norway

Troll Tongue, Norway

Trolltunga, or Troll's Tongue, is an unusual rock outcrop 350 meters high on Mount Skjeggedal. Why language? And why a troll? As an old Norwegian legend says, in those parts there lived a troll who constantly tested fate: he dived into deep pools and jumped over abysses. One day he decided to check whether it was true that the rays of the sun were deadly to trolls. At dawn, he stuck his tongue out of his cave and... was petrified forever. The rock attracts modern adventurers like a magnet: sit on the edge, do a somersault, take a photo. There is no troll, but his work lives on!

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Brocken, Germany

Brocken, Germany

This is the most high point Harz Mountains (1141 m), where, according to legend, witches held a Sabbath on Walpurgis Night. At the top you can observe something rare in beauty and mystery. a natural phenomenon- Brocken ghost. If you stand with your back to the setting sun, a large shadow with a rainbow halo around your head will appear on the surface of the clouds or in the fog. Sometimes you even get the feeling that the “ghost” is moving. The phenomenon was first described by Johann Silberschlag in 1780 and since then has been mentioned more than once in the literature about the Harz Mountains.

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Golosov Ravine was once a deserted, gloomy outskirts of Moscow. Now this is a beautiful place, shrouded in legends, in the Moscow Kolomenskoye Museum-Reserve. One of the legends tells of a strange green fog. Allegedly, there were cases when people wandered in an emerald haze for what seemed to them to be several minutes, but in reality decades passed. Also in the ravine there are stones that in ancient times had sacred meaning: the Goose Stone patronized warriors, giving them strength and luck in battle, and the Maiden Stone brought happiness to girls.

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Stonehenge, UK

Stonehenge, UK

130 km from London, in Wiltshire, there is a bizarre structure of huge stone blocks. It is one of the most popular archaeological sites in the world. Researchers have found that the construction of the complex lasted almost two thousand years and took place in several stages. However, it is still unclear who built it and why. According to popular legend, huge blue stones have magical power, and the structure was erected by a wizard named Merlin. There are also versions that Stonehenge is a Stone Age observatory, a Druid sanctuary or an ancient tomb.

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Goseck Circle, Germany

Goseck Circle, Germany

The Goseck Circle refers to concentric ditches with a diameter of 75 meters and log circles with gates. Through them, on the days of the summer and winter solstice, the sun penetrates into the circle. This has given rise to the theory that this Neolithic structure is the world's oldest observatory. It was supposedly built in 4900 BC. e. It seems that the creators of the ancient “celestial calendar” had good knowledge of astronomy. It is noteworthy that similar prehistoric structures exist not only near Goseck, but also in other places in Germany, as well as in Austria and Croatia.

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Machu Picchu, Peru

Machu Picchu, Peru

On the top mountain range, at an altitude of 2,450 m, among the clouds above the valley of the Urubamba River, the ancient “lost city of the Incas” rises majestically. Machu Picchu was built in the 15th century, but in 1532 the palaces, altars and houses were abandoned. Where have the residents gone? According to historians, the elite of the Inca Empire lived in Machu Picchu, and with the fall of the empire, the inhabitants simply left in search of better life. According to popular beliefs, most of the population was sacrificed to the gods to save the empire, and the rest scattered throughout the valley. But there is no clear answer.

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Thor's Well, USA

Thor's Well, USA

A natural funnel with a diameter of 5 meters in the strait of Cape Perpetua was named in honor of the god Thor. But more often it is called the “gate to the underworld.” The spectacle is truly hellishly beautiful: during high tide, water quickly fills the well, and then sharply “shoots” upward in a six-meter fountain, forming a whirlwind of spray. It’s as if there’s a monster living at the bottom that gets angry at the streams of water pouring on it and pushes them back. But it has not yet been possible to find out what is actually inside the funnel - diving there is too dangerous.

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Moeraki Boulders, New Zealand

Huge stone balls with a diameter of up to two meters are “scattered” along the Koekohe beach, not far from the village of Moeraki. The surface of some of them is absolutely smooth, while others resemble a turtle shell. Some boulders are intact, while others are broken into pieces. Where they came from is a mystery of nature. According to the Maori folk version, these are potatoes that woke up from a mythical canoe. There are also opinions that these are fossilized dinosaur eggs and remains aircraft aliens. Scientists believe that these are geological formations that formed on the ocean floor millions of years ago.

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Champ Island, Russia

Champ Island, Russia

Another place with mysterious stone balls is Champ Island, located in the central part of Franz Josef Land ( Arhangelsk region). The entire coast is literally strewn with spherical stones ranging in size from a few centimeters to three meters. Where did they come from on a deserted island? It is believed that due to the melting of glaciers, stones fell into natural pools and were ground down by water. But why only on this island? Among the supernatural theories are the intervention of aliens and the fact that the stones are artifacts of some lost civilization.

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Golden Stone, Myanmar

Golden Stone, Myanmar

On the edge of the ledge of the Chaittiyo rock lies a granite boulder 5.5 meters high and about 25 meters in circumference. The boulder has been balancing on the edge of the abyss for several centuries and, contrary to the laws of physics, does not fall. According to legend, Buddha gave a lock of his hair to a hermit monk. To preserve the relic, he placed it under a huge stone placed on the rock by Burmese spirits. The stone is covered with gold leaf and is one of the main Buddhist shrines. It has not yet been possible to find a scientific basis for the phenomenon of the Chaittiyo Pagoda. And is it necessary?

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Beelitz-Heilstetten, Germany

Beelitz-Heilstetten, Germany

40 km from Berlin there is a sanatorium that was once considered the best in Germany. At first it was a hospital for tuberculosis patients, and then a military hospital. In 1916, the young soldier Adolf Hitler “licked his wounds” there. After World War II, the hospital was at the disposal of the Soviet authorities. Now there are many horror stories associated with the sanatorium in the city of Belits. Allegedly, strange sounds are heard there, and letters from soldiers are still found in the walls of the building. Speculation and nothing more? Probably. But visitors say: the longer you stay there, the more tired and depressed you feel.

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Mystery Spot, USA

Mystery Spot, USA

“Mystery Spot” is translated from English as “Mysterious Place”. In the mid-twentieth century, businessman George Prater decided to build a house. He chose a place on the hillside, bought land, but was never able to erect a building. The house looked crooked, although the drawings were correct and the builders were sober. It turned out that the laws of physics were violated on the hill: balls were rolling up an inclined plane, a broom stood without support, water flowed upward, people stood in an inclined position. Scientists say that these are nothing more than optical illusions, but many tend to see a mystical trace in what is happening.

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Pyramid of Cheops, Egypt

Pyramid of Cheops, Egypt

The largest and most mysterious of the greats Egyptian pyramids located on the Giza plateau. Its height is 138.8 meters (due to the current lack of cladding), the length of the base is 230 meters. Built in the 26th century BC. e. The construction of the pyramid lasted more than 20 years, colossal resources were involved: 2.5 million multi-ton limestone blocks, tens of thousands of slaves. It would seem that the Cheops pyramid has already been studied far and wide, but disputes among scientists do not subside. How did the construction go? How was this gigantic structure used? There are still more questions than answers.

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Newgrange, Ireland

Newgrange, Ireland

40 km north of Dublin there is an ancient stone structure. It is 700 years older than the Egyptian pyramids. According to legend, Newgrange is the home of the Celtic god of wisdom and the sun, Dagda. According to archaeologists, this place served as a tomb. There is also a version that this is one of the first observatories: during the winter solstice, the morning rays of the sun penetrate the hole above the entrance and illuminate the room from the inside. But researchers still have more questions than answers: where did the inscriptions on the stones come from and what do they mean, how did the builders achieve such accuracy, what tools did they use?

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Heizhu, China

Heizhu, China

In the south of China there is one of the most powerful anomalous zones world - Heizhu Valley, which translated means “Hollow of Black Bamboo”. Here, under mysterious circumstances, accidents occur and people disappear in thick fog. Find objective reason no one can do what is happening. Some believe that plants that release toxic substances grow and rot in the forest. Others believe that the cause of the strange events is strong geomagnetic radiation. Mystics say that in the valley there is a portal to a parallel world.

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Horsetail Falls, USA

Horsetail Falls, USA

In Yosemite National Park, on the eastern slope of Mount El Capitan, there is a 650-meter waterfall. Most of the year it is unremarkable, but in February the falling streams of water turn into “lava flows”. This amazing natural phenomenon is due to the fact that at sunset the sun's rays are reflected in the waterfall, creating a visual illusion that hot metal is flowing from the rock. According to legend, at the top of the mountain was the house of a blacksmith who made the best horseshoes for horses in the area. But due to heavy rain, the forge was washed off the cliff. Since then, the waterfall once a year “reminds” of this tragic event.

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Chillingham Castle, UK

In the north of England, in the county of Northumberland, there is a majestic 12th-century castle with a watchtower. At one time it was of great strategic importance, but in the 17th century it became the residence of the aristocracy. Dramas and intrigues unfolded within its walls, claiming many lives. This may be why Chillingham is Britain's most popular haunted castle these days. There are at least three of them: Shining Boy (appears in blue clothes), Tormentor Sage (seen in the torture room) and Lady Mary Berkeley (emerges from her portrait in the Gray Room).

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Mercado de Sonora, Mexico

Mercado de Sonora, Mexico

One of the most unusual markets world - the dream of magicians and mediums of all stripes. The place, if not mystical, is certainly atmospheric, imbued with many legends. Most tourists visit the witch market simply out of curiosity. Where else can you see bizarre ritual objects, masks, dried snakes, spider legs and rare herbs? Local sorcerers - brujos - can tell fortunes, cleanse the aura and “cure” ailments. Mexicans also often come to the market - they take sorcerers quite seriously.

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Restaurant T'Spookhuys, Belgium

Restaurant T'Spookhuys, Belgium

“Horror Restaurant”, “House of a Thousand Ghosts” - all this is about the T’Spookhuys establishment in the city of Turnhout. The restaurant was conceived as an attraction for lovers of mysticism: a gloomy interior, fog swirling on the floor, moving pictures, creaking doors, skulls instead of plates, an extraordinary menu and waiters in the role of vampires. At first, the owners' dark humor brought success - there was no end to customers. But a few years later, the restaurant acquired notoriety; they began to say that ghosts actually lived there. Now the establishment is abandoned, but the atmosphere and ominous aura have been preserved.

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Loch Ness, UK

Loch Ness - deep lake in the highlands of Scotland, where, according to legend, a monster lives. Supposedly this is a creature reminiscent of a prehistoric lizard. One eyewitness described it as follows: 40 feet in length, 4 fins, the body smoothly merges into an elongated neck with small tubercles. There are quite a lot of people who claim to have seen the Loch Ness monster. More than three thousand cases have been recorded. There is even photo and video evidence. But there are also plenty of skeptics. The debate about whether there is a monster in the lake has lasted for decades and flares up with renewed vigor from time to time.

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Lake Kara-Kul, Russia

Lake Kara-Kul, Russia

The Russian counterpart of the Loch Ness monster, according to legend, lives in Lake Kara-Kul in the Baltasinsky district of the Republic of Tatarstan. This is an elongated reservoir with an average depth of 8 meters and an area of ​​1.6 hectares. Translated from Tatar “kara-kul” means “ black lake" It is believed that the reservoir was previously surrounded by dense forest, which is why the water appeared black. Local residents have a legend about the bull-like water snake Su Ugez. If she appears to people, expect trouble - fire or famine. There is no documentary evidence of the presence of the monster in the lake. But superstitious people prefer to avoid it.

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Lake Hillier, Australia

Lake Hillier, Australia

The lake is surrounded by eucalyptus forest, and is separated from the ocean by a narrow strip of land. But the main feature of the lake is that it is pink. The reason for such an unusual color of water has not been solved. It was assumed that the problem was specific algae, but this was not confirmed. But there is a beautiful legend that a sailor who was crippled but survived a shipwreck ended up on desert island. He suffered from pain and hunger and asked heaven for deliverance, until finally a man came out of the forest with jugs of milk and blood. He poured them into the lake and it turned pink. The sailor plunged into the scarlet water and got rid of pain and hunger. Forever.

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Hvitserkur, Iceland

Hvitserkur, Iceland

This is a 15-meter cliff on east coast Vatnsnes Peninsula. Its shape resembles a water-drinking dragon. But, according to popular belief, this is a troll who went out to the sun and turned to stone. Scientists believe that Hvitserkur is the remains ancient volcano, blurry salty waters and destroyed by cold winds. To prevent the sea from completely destroying the figure, its base was reinforced with concrete. People from all over the world come to admire this rock. And sometimes what is observed there northern lights gives it additional mystery.

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Manpupuner, Russia

Manpupuner, Russia

Other names are Weathering Pillars and Mansi Logos. These are mountain outcrops with a height of 30 to 42 meters on the territory of the Pechora-Ilychsky Nature Reserve. It is believed that 200 million years ago there were high mountains, but due to snow, frost and winds, only small pillars remained of them. Many legends are associated with them. According to one of them, the leader of the giant tribe wanted to marry the daughter of the leader of the Mansi tribe. Having received a refusal, the giant attacked the village. It’s good that the beauty’s brother arrived in time: he saved the village by turning the giants into stones with the help of a magic shield.

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San Zhi, Taiwan

San Zhi, Taiwan

Sanzhi was supposed to be the city of the future. The luxury residential complex consists of futuristic houses shaped like “flying saucers.” An elegant staircase leads to each of the “plates”, and, according to the architects’ idea, you can go down from the second floor directly into the ocean or pool along water slide. Huge amounts of money were allocated for construction. But the company that built San Zhi went bankrupt, and accidents at the construction site gave rise to unkind rumors. The complex was completed, but advertising could no longer change the glory of the “cursed place.” The city is abandoned. The authorities wanted to demolish it, but local residents were against it. They believe that San Zhi is a refuge for lost souls.

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Singing Dune, Kazakhstan

Singing Dune, Kazakhstan

Not far from Almaty there is a three-kilometer dune with a height of 150 meters. It opens from it beautiful view to the Ili River and the purple mountains. In dry weather, the dune produces melodic sounds, like an organ. According to one legend, the shaitan, who was wandering around the world and plotting intrigues for people, turned into a dune. According to another version, Genghis Khan and his comrades are buried in the sands. The dune “sings” when the soul of the khan, “exhausted from mental anguish, tells his descendants about his exploits.” It is noteworthy that the dune does not wander across the plain, but stands in place for millennia, despite the unsteadiness of the sand and strong winds.

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Zone of Silence, Mexico

Zone of Silence, Mexico

An anomalous desert on the border of the states of Durango, Chihuahua and Coahuila, where reception and registration of radio and sound signals is impossible. There the receivers stop working, the compass doesn't work and the clock stops. Scientists have tried several times to establish the cause of the anomalies, but their conclusions boil down to something like this: something is suppressing radio waves. The area, also nicknamed the "Tethys Sea" after the ancient ocean, has been associated with many mysterious incidents: from plane disappearances and missile crashes to evidence of strange travelers leaving scorched grass behind them and UFO landings.

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Winchester House, USA

Winchester House, USA

525 Winchester Boulevard in San Jose has a bad reputation. There are 160 rooms and 6 kitchens on three floors. At the same time, many doors lead to dead ends, steps go to the ceiling, and windows go to the floor. Not a house, but a labyrinth! This architectural “miracle” was created by Sarah Winchester. Her father-in-law made weapons, for which, according to the woman, a curse was placed on their family. On the advice of a medium, she built a house for the souls of people whose lives were taken by the inventions of old man Winchester. According to rumors, house number 525 is actually haunted. But even without them, the gloomy layout gives visitors chills.

Valley of the Mills, Italy

In the heart of Sorrento, at the bottom of the gorge that divides the city into two parts, there are ruins medieval city, the highlight of which was water mills. Hence the name of the valley - Valle dei Mulini. The walls of the ancient mill have almost collapsed, the wheel is overgrown with moss - in the middle modern city it's like a fragment of another world. Perhaps that is why the Valley of Mills is one of the favorite attractions of fans of mysticism. They believe that the mill has otherworldly inhabitants. Allegedly, laughter is sometimes heard from the gorge, and a strange light is visible from the windows of the building.

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Dancing forest, Russia

Dancing forest, Russia

37 km from the Curonian Spit ( Kaliningrad region) there is an unusual coniferous forest. Tree trunks are intricately curved and twisted into spirals. The forest was planted in 1961, and it is still unclear why the pines “started dancing.” According to one version, the trunks of still young trees are damaged by the caterpillars of the hibernating shoot. According to another, the reason lies in the geomagnetic effect of a tectonic fracture. Ufologists see the intervention of an alien intelligence in everything. In 2006, new trees were planted in the forest to see if they would bend. While the seedlings are growing straight.

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Pluckley, UK

Pluckley, UK

This is a place in the English county of Kent where, according to legend, at least a dozen ghosts live. On the road from Pluckley to Maltman's Hill, a carriage drawn by four horses appears from time to time, the spirit of a colonel wanders through the pasture, and on one of the streets you can stumble upon the phantom of a hanged man. Each of the 12 ghosts has its own story. Local residents say that they have become accustomed to their “neighbors” from the other world and are no longer afraid of them. But many believe that the ghosts are a publicity stunt to attract tourists. True, it has not yet been possible to prove this, as well as the presence of ghosts.

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Catacombs of Jihlava, Czech Republic

Catacombs of Jihlava, Czech Republic

Jihlava is a city in the southeast of the Czech Republic. One of its main attractions is the 25-kilometer catacombs. Once these were silver mines, then they began to be used for economic needs. In 1996, archaeologists worked in the catacombs and recorded that the sound of an organ was heard in the place indicated by the legends, and in one of the passages the researchers discovered a “luminous staircase” emitting a reddish light. Archaeologists were examined - mass hallucinations were excluded. The reasons for the mysterious phenomena are unknown.

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Temehea-Tohua, French Polynesia

On the island of Nuku Hiva, part of the Marquesas archipelago, in the town of Temehea-Tohua, statues of strange creatures were found. Disproportional bodies, elongated heads with large mouths and eyes. Archaeologists date the creation of the mysterious idols to approximately the 10th–11th centuries. Why did the Aboriginal people make them? By official version, these are monuments to priests in ritual masks. But it is strange that the masks themselves were not found on the island. Hence the assumption that Nuku Hiva was once visited by aliens, and local residents imprinted their appearance in stone.

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Big blue hole, Belize

Great Blue Hole, Belize

This is a huge funnel with a diameter of 305 meters and a depth of 120 meters. Located in the center of Lighthouse Reef. In 1972, Jacques-Yves Cousteau established that it was originally a system of limestone caves that originated during the Ice Age. When the sea level rose, the roof of the cave collapsed and a karst sinkhole was formed. But there is an opinion that flooding could not have provoked destruction - the size is too large, too correct round form. There had to be an external influence, for example, a meteorite fall.

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Lake Paasselka, Finland

Lake Paasselka, Finland

In autumn, on Lake Paasselka you can see lights wandering across the water surface. Some of them are spherical, others resemble flames. According to Finnish beliefs, they point to places where treasures are hidden. But they lure greedy people to depths from which it is difficult for even experienced swimmers to escape. Will-o'-the-wisps are also found in other parts of the planet, but they were captured on Paasselka. They say different things about the nature of the strange lights: either discharges of electricity in the atmosphere, or flammable methane coming out of the ground, or maybe traces of a UFO moving?

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Lake Ertso, South Ossetia

Lake Ertso, South Ossetia

This is a picturesque reservoir with a length of 940 meters in the Dzau region of South Ossetia. Local residents often call it a “ghost lake”, since every 5-6 years all the water disappears from the lake and then returns back. According to legend, in the old days a greedy rich man lived on its shore. Angry peasants drowned him, and since then his greedy spirit periodically drinks all the water in the lake, and then falls into oblivion again. Geologists suggest that the water goes into karst caves under the bottom of the reservoir. Ufologists have their own version that there is an alien base under the lake.

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Shichen, China

Shichen, China

An ancient city, flooded in 1959 as a result of the construction of a hydroelectric power station. Shichen, or "Lion City", was founded in 670. Five city gates with towers, six stone streets - everything was under water. The size of the Lion City is about 62 football fields. Surprisingly, even after half a century, the city is perfectly preserved, including wooden beams and steps, as if this “Chinese Atlantis” is inhabited and someone carefully maintains order there. The mysterious underwater kingdom is very popular among divers.

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Hashima Island, Japan

Hashima Island, Japan

Located in the Pacific Ocean, 15 km from the city of Nagasaki. The Japanese call it “gunkanjima”, that is, “cruiser” - the island looks like a ship. In 1810, a coal deposit was found there. In the 1930s, Hashima was significant industrial center. In the second half of the twentieth century, more than 5 thousand people lived there. But coal reserves were melting, and along with them the population was declining. Currently, the abandoned island is partially open to the public. Tourists enjoy wandering among the gloomy buildings, listening to the stories of the guides. Hashima became one of the illustrations of the deserted world in the series “Life after People.”

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Amur Pillars, Russia

Amur Pillars, Russia

A natural monument 134 km from Komsomolsk-on-Amur, glorified in legends. Granite pillars from 12 to 70 meters high stand on the slopes of the hill and have their own names: Shaman-stone, Walls, Bowl, Church, Crown, Heart, Turtle and others. Local residents talk about the strange aura of the stones, and shamans still perform rituals there. Scientists have made various assumptions about the origin of the Amur Pillars. According to one version, they are about 170 million years old and are the result of the activity of an underground volcano.

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"Sacred Forest", Italy

"Sacred Forest", Italy

The town of Bomarzo is home to the ominous but beautiful “Sacred Forest,” or “Garden of Monsters.” The park has about thirty mythologically inspired sculptures and fantastic buildings covered with moss: an elephant devouring a man, a three-headed monster, a dragon dog, the gates of the underworld and others. All these are the fruits of the imagination of Pier Francesco Orsini, who decided to perpetuate the memory of his tragically deceased wife. The Orsini heirs did not take care of the park, and it acquired an ominous appearance. There were rumors that evil spirits were roaming there. But despite this, the park became a source of inspiration for Salvador Dali, Manuel Mujica Lainez and other creators.

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Stanley Hotel, USA

Stanley Hotel, USA

Located in Colorado, near Rocky Mountain National Park. Built in the early 20th century, the hotel consists of 140 apartments and is believed to be haunted by ghosts, such as the ghost of a musician playing the piano. There have never been any murders or other terrible events at the hotel, but the place is literally imbued with mysticism. It inspired Stephen King to write the book “The Shining,” which was later adapted into a TV series—the hotel itself served as the “scenery.” And Stanley Kubrick's feature film of the same name became one of the best horror films in cinema history.

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Nesvizh Castle, Belarus

Nesvizh Castle, Belarus

This palace and castle complex is included in the list World Heritage UNESCO. The legend of the Black Lady is associated with it, the prototype of which is the cousin of the first owner of the castle, Barbara. Her lover's mother did not bless their marriage, and when they finally got married secretly, she poisoned her daughter-in-law. The grief-stricken husband asked the alchemist to summon the spirit of his wife in order to look at her again. During a seance, the widower, in a fit of emotion, touched Barbara, which was absolutely forbidden to do. Since then, her ghost allegedly lives within the walls of Nesvizh Castle.

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Teotihuacan, Mexico

Teotihuacan, Mexico

"Teotihuacan" means "city of the gods." This mysterious place is located 50 km from Mexico City. Now the city is deserted, but once it was inhabited by more than two hundred thousand people. The layout is striking: the regular lines of the streets form blocks and at the same time are strictly perpendicular to the main avenue. In the center of the city is a huge square with massive pyramids on platforms. Teotihuacan was built according to a carefully thought-out plan and flourished. But in the 7th century it was abandoned. Why is unclear. Either because of a foreign invasion, or because of a popular uprising.

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Skeleton Coast, Namibia

Skeleton Coast, Namibia

In the middle of the sand dunes of the national park, dilapidated ships seem like phantoms. But these are real ships that were once caught in a storm and moored to the shore to wait out the storm. Due to the shifting sands, ships found themselves cut off from the water, often at quite a distance from the ocean. One of the most famous “prisoners” of the mysterious coast is the steamship “Eduard Bolen”, which found its last refuge about two centuries ago. South part The Skeleton Coast is open to visitors and arouses great interest among lovers of mysticism.

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Hicks Point, Australia

Hicks Point, Australia

In 1947, the keeper of Australia's tallest lighthouse went fishing and never returned. And the new caretakers allegedly began to notice strange things: shuffling, heavy tread on spiral staircase, sighs, door handles polished to a shine. Thus was born the legend that a ghost settled in the lighthouse. The Cape Hicks Lighthouse is currently open to visitors. There you can admire the local beauty and spend the night. Every year, thousands of tourists come to Hicks Point in hopes of seeing the ghost of the lighthouse keeper.

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Chandragupta Column, India

Chandragupta Column, India

A seven-meter iron column included in architectural ensemble Qutub Minara. This is one of the main attractions of Delhi. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that over the centuries it has hardly undergone corrosion. It was suggested that the reason for this was a special metal and a favorable climate. According to another version, the column was preserved because of the oils with which pilgrims wiped it. But none of the hypotheses has been officially confirmed: it is still unclear how in 415 it was possible to obtain the prototype of modern weather-resistant steel.

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Bulgakov's apartment, Russia

Bulgakov's apartment, Russia

In the 50th apartment of house No. 10 on Bolshaya Sadovaya there is a museum of Mikhail Bulgakov. The writer lived there from 1921 to 1924, and it is believed that this place became the prototype of the apartment where the “Satan’s Ball” took place in the novel “The Master and Margarita.” The entire front door is covered with lines from the novel - visitors are immersed in an atmosphere of mysticism without even crossing the threshold. Eat urban legend, as if on moonless nights the sounds of a piano are heard from the “bad apartment”, and strange silhouettes flash through its windows. Therefore, the museum is visited not only by fans of the writer, but also by lovers of mysticism, confident that Woland, the cat Behemoth and other characters are not fiction at all.

My home is my castle. This is what the famous saying goes, and this is how most people perceive their home. But there are exceptions to any rule, and they are so strange that it is impossible not to talk about them. What do the most dangerous houses in the world look like? Let's try to make a top ten "horror" films.

Under the gun of lightning

The village of Kifuka, located in the Republic of Congo, is no different from the rest settlements countries. But this is only at first glance. If you take a close look at its local residents, you will notice that none of them use mobile phones, tablets and other modern gadgets. And the point here is not at all a matter of poverty, although the village certainly cannot be called prosperous.

The secret of such technical “illiteracy” lies in the natural anomaly of the area, which attracts lightning to itself according to the principle of a magnet. Scientists have come up with interesting statistics - it turns out that up to 150 lightning strikes per square kilometer of an unfortunate settlement per year. It is not surprising that, for safety reasons, people prefer to remain separated from civilization, but alive, rather than dying under the discharges of heavenly “electricity”.

Chernobyl aborigines

More than 30 years have passed since the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, but the echoes of the tragedy still resonate to this day. The once noisy and energetically developing city of Pripyat with a population of more than 100 thousand people has turned into a deserted “ghost”, frightening with its silence and desolation. During the evacuation, local residents suddenly left their homes, leaving behind their property, pets, and personal vehicles. They didn’t know then that there would never be a way back.

Although some desperate extreme sports enthusiasts still went against all the prohibitions and after some time returned to their native lands. They are called self-settlers. In total, about 80 such people live within the 30-kilometer exclusion zone. These are mostly pensioners who live from subsistence farming and gardening.

IN last years Excursions to Chernobyl have begun to be organized, so those who want to tickle their nerves have a chance not only to see the destroyed power plant with their own eyes, but also to communicate with the local population.

Lake with a “surprise”

Lake Kivu in Central Africa impresses with its beauty and picturesqueness. Its clear waters are home to many exotic fish, and its coastal landscapes are worthy of an artist’s brush. The area around the lake is far from deserted; on the contrary, a total of about 2 million people live on its shores. And everything would be fine if not for the huge reserves of methane and carbon dioxide, which can explode at any moment and cause a powerful earthquake.

The further course of events is not difficult to predict. Anyone who does not die under the tsunami will be poisoned by poisonous gases. The saddest thing is that no one can say how long this freshwater time bomb will remain silent - everyone hopes for the best and lives one day at a time. In 1948, a small underwater eruption was recorded, as a result of which the fish in the lake were simply boiled. When the next “X-hour” will come is unknown.

Rainy village

The Indian mountain village of Mavsilam is recognized as the wettest place on the planet, and officially entered the data in the Guinness Book of Records. Every spring and summer it is attacked by monsoons coming from the Bay of Bengal. The air can be twisted like bed linen rinsed in a river. Local residents have long been accustomed to such vagaries of nature and stock up on large bamboo umbrellas in advance, under which they can completely shelter from the rain.

Due to high humidity Agriculture the village is not developed. All vegetables and fruits are imported, so peasants do not have to work hard in their gardens. Oddly enough, frequent showers also bring tangible benefits. They contribute to the formation of waterfalls, decorating the already gorgeous flora.

Water knocks out in soft limestone rock entire caves with ornate labyrinths and creates underground lakes. Natural beauty attracts numerous tourists, and those, in turn, attract money.

And there is life in permafrost

Yakut village Oymyakon - although not the most scary place, but definitely on the list of mysterious settlements on the planet. It is difficult to imagine how people can live in such harsh climatic conditions. In winter, the thermometer may drop below 60 degrees. The maximum limit was recorded at -77 degrees, and this despite the fact that in summer the heat reaches +30-35 degrees. How “trained” must the body be to withstand temperature changes of 100 °C?

In total, about one hundred people live in the village. They live the old fashioned way - in simple wooden houses heated by stoves. It is simply impossible to provide centralized water supply and sewerage here. The soil freezes so deeply that laying pipes is technically impossible. However, people are accustomed to natural anomalies, and even school classes are only canceled if the temperature drops below 50 degrees.

At the top of the Andes

The city of La Rinconada in Peru, lost in mountain peaks Andes is another one unique place where life glimmers. It is located at an altitude of 5 thousand meters above sea level, and to get there you need to be a real extreme sports enthusiast. Not only will you have to climb the rocky slopes of the mountains, testing your body's endurance, but you will also have to breathe rarefied air. In such conditions, even a hundred meters can become a long road, which will take several hours to overcome.

But such prospects are not at all frightening to reckless adventurers. Most of them are attracted not by the beauty of the Andes or even the romanticism of travel, but by gold mines and the opportunity to get rich. True, you will have to work in Spartan conditions - hard, long and exhausting. The city has no sewerage system, running water, garbage disposal or any infrastructure at all. But even the stench and dirt does not push gold miners away from their goal. Proof of this is the constant growth of the population, which has doubled over the past ten years.

Today, about 50 thousand people live and work in La Rinconada.

Life on a volcano

Indonesia is not only popular tourist destination, but also one of the most dangerous places on the planet. Being located in a seismically active zone, it simply “drowns” in earthquakes. Due to frequent tremors, lowland areas often suffer from strong hurricanes and tornadoes. The local population lives like on a powder keg - you never know where trouble will come from first: from the mountains or the ocean.

About 50 million people live on the island of Sumatra, and one can only guess how they manage to adapt to such unstable conditions. climatic conditions. The island of Java is no less famous for its pranks. Volcano Merapi keeps everyone in constant tension, and strives to release tons of fiery lava onto the earth again. It even has its own “schedule” of eruptions - about once every 7 years it erupts in a major way, and small earthquakes occur on the island about twice a year.

Dragon Island

Komodo Island, part of Indonesia, can be called one of the most exotic places on the planet. And it’s not about the chic sandy beaches, clear warm water and palm-fringed landscapes, but about the unusual local “residents”. An unprepared tourist may feel like he has stepped into the filming of a Jurassic Park movie, or at least into a strange zoo. Everywhere you look, giant monitor lizards are walking around - scary, clumsy, but very agile reptiles.

In total, there are about 1,700 of them on the island, despite the fact that the local population is about the same - about 2,000 people. It is unknown how prehistoric lizards got to Komodo, and most importantly, how they managed to adapt to modern life.

But the fact remains that monitor lizards feel like full-fledged masters of the island. They feed mainly on small and medium-sized game; they do not attack people, but cases of aggression still occur.

The sands are advancing

There is one village in the Nenets Autonomous Okrug called Shoina. Every resident's morning begins with digging out sand from their house. It sounds strange, but for the local population this has already become a familiar daily routine. Only about 200 people live in this godforsaken village today, but once upon a time fishing flourished here.

Stormy and irresponsible human activity ultimately led to a sad outcome. Once fish-rich waters White Sea exhausted their reserves; moreover, fishermen completely destroyed benthic vegetation through the use of heavy trawls. The tundra was also damaged, as a result of which the sands began to attack the village. Sand dunes swallowed up roads and streets, swept away coastal houses and state farm buildings. And only through the efforts of the remaining residents, together with the only tractor in the village, is it possible to keep Shoina on the map of Russia for now.

Away from people - closer to God

The Hanging Monastery of Xuankun-si, founded 1,500 thousand years ago, has preserved its architecture almost unchanged. As if glued to sheer cliff, from a distance it resembles a house of cards. To cross the stormy Hun River, now blocked by a dam, pilgrims had to cross a plank bridge swinging over the abyss. Today this bridge is closed to prevent reckless tourists from tempting their fate.

The temple includes a complex of buildings connected by tunnels and stairs carved directly into the rock. Until now, modern architects are at a loss as to how Buddhist monks were able to build such a wonder of the world without the appropriate equipment and working tools.

The most mysterious places in the world

5 (100%) 1 voted

There are many places in our world that both attract and frighten with their mystery. People disappear there, ghosts appear, animals behave strangely. Scientists voice various theories, but none of them claims to be one hundred percent reliable.

1. Headless Valley, Canada

This place got its creepy name due to a series of tragic incidents. IN late XIX centuries, gold was discovered here, and fortune hunters flocked to the valley. In 1898, a group of 6 gold miners disappeared without a trace. 7 years later, two MacLeod brothers and their friend Robert Vere disappeared in the same valley. After 3 years, 9 headless corpses were accidentally discovered.
Mysterious disappearances of people continue in the valley to this day.


The local residents themselves are sure that all the deaths are the work of soskvachi. Creatures similar to hairy giant men were often seen here, and even more often their traces were found.
In fact, most likely, this is the work of a gang of thugs operating in the valley who are hunting for gold miners and their prey. However, the police do not confirm this guess.

2. Valley of Falling Birds, India

IN last days summer in the Indian state of Assam mountain valley Unusual phenomena occur during Jatinga. At night, closer to midnight, flocks of birds fly here in an almost unconscious state.
The birds circle low - local residents even knock them down with sticks and then cook them over a fire. Many birds fall to the ground and do not even try to escape from the hands of the person who lifts them.


The inhabitants of the valley are sure that the gods are rewarding them for their righteous life by sending them easy prey.
Scientists have established that the hypnotic behavior of birds (the absence of the instinct of self-preservation and the body’s reactions to external stimuli) is formed only with the obligatory combination of such factors as the new moon, wind and dark time days.
Based on this, we can voice a hypothesis about the presence in a given area of ​​a short-term geomagnetic anomaly, which, if all of the above coincide, natural factors has such an unusual effect on the birds living in the area.

3. Death Valley, USA

Contrary to popular legends, this place is not associated with the disappearance of people and the death of livestock - the valley received its name during the California Gold Rush. Here you can observe unusual crawling stones - many have seen them, but they were recorded on camera only 2 years ago.
The tracks trailing behind multi-kilogram boulders reach several tens of meters.


Scientists led by paleobiologist Richard Norris reported that they had solved the mystery of moving stones in Death Valley.
According to them, the movement of stones is influenced by daily temperature changes in winter, coastal wind, the nature of the soil at the bottom of a nearby lake, and even climate change. In their opinion, due to general warming, such movements have become less frequent.

4. Drossolides, Greece

Near the Franca Castello castle greek island In Crete, many locals and tourists have encountered an amazing chronomirage (an event from the past) called “drossolides”, which means “droplets of moisture”.
According to them, in the early summer morning, strange outlines of warriors appear over the sea, shrouded in fog, and sometimes the sound of battle can be clearly heard. After some time, the chronomirage disappears near the castle walls. A fierce battle between the Turks and Greeks took place at this site in the mid-19th century. Everyone who observed this mystical phenomenon claims that the phantoms of these very warriors appear near the castle.


Researcher Andrei Perepelitsyn believes that elementary particles with sufficiently high energies, moving in air saturated with water vapor, leave a trail of water droplets. They may be able to ionize the air and "reveal" into misty images before the dew falls. And the rest is a matter of human imagination.
Perhaps chronomirages cause magnetic storms or geomagnetic disturbances in some small area of ​​the area. To find out, further research is needed taking into account the possible influence of these factors.

5. Lake Dead, Kazakhstan

This small lake in the Taldykurgan region of Kazakhstan it seems completely normal from the outside, but even in the hottest summer it remains terribly cold. There is absolutely no life in the lake: there are no fish, not even aquatic insects.
And people drown in the lake all the time. Another frightening fact is that the drowned people of the Dead Lake do not float to the surface, but, on the contrary, sink to the bottom and stand there straight as candles. Even professional divers with equipment cannot stay in the water of this lake for more than 5 minutes. For some inexplicable reason, they suddenly begin to choke, although their tanks are still full of air.


According to one version, mystical rumors are associated with the phenomenon of hypersolarization of water and the purple bacteria living there that produce hydrogen sulfide. Even in small doses, it actively affects the human psyche.
There is also an assumption that at the bottom of the lake there is a crevice from which toxic gas is released, which kills all living things. However, there are no plans to conduct separate scientific studies of the Dead Lake in Kazakhstan yet.

6. Heizhu Black Bamboo Hollow, China

Hundreds of people enter these bamboo jungles every year and stay there forever. Moreover, everyone disappears completely without a trace - no traces, no bodies, no personal belongings. Documented cases of missing people here date back to the middle of the last century.
In 1950, for an unknown reason, a plane crashed here. What's interesting is that there are none technical faults was not on board, the crew did not send distress signals and did not report any oddities. The plane, along with all the people, simply disappeared.


Of course, local residents talk about portals to parallel worlds and time paradoxes that transport people from the ravine to some other reality.
But scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have identified a structure of geological rocks in this place that is completely unique in its characteristics, and also recorded the release of deadly toxic fumes, which turned out to be a product of the rotting of certain tree species, of which there is an abundance here. The researchers also noted a difficult local climate with unexpectedly and sharply changing weather, and strong geomagnetic radiation.

7. Pluckley Village, England

Residents of the English village of Pluckley claim the existence of as many as 12 ghosts in their village. The Plaklians say that all the ghosts once lived in this village, but died or died long ago.


Skeptics are sure that the village population is simply flattered by the attention of tourists who constantly come to look at the ghosts.
However, when a group of researchers arrived in the village in 2011, something inexplicable happened. Pluckley was swarmed with flies in near-zero temperatures at the start of winter. The researchers had to return with nothing.

8. Palmyra Island, Pacific Ocean

The ship of the American captain Edmund Fanning in 1798 crashed off the coast of Palmyra - a small uninhabited atoll with an area of ​​only 12 square meters. km. Many of those who tried to swim to the island drowned or were eaten by sharks. 10 people were saved, and after 2 months only three remained alive on the island. Survivors claimed that the island killed the others.
During World War II, Palmyra was used by US Air Force aircraft for landing. However, everyone who is different time was on the island, they said that it aroused fear, depression, anger and hatred in them. Some suddenly took their own lives without any apparent reason, others, on the contrary, suddenly went crazy and killed their friends and colleagues. Almost everyone says that it was scary all the time on the island.


Some speculate about the existence of a certain religious sect on the island. Scientist Mershan Marin believes that there is some unknown creature hostile to humans on the atoll. Many support this idea and try to prove that the island itself is alive. Luring him into a trap with his beauty, he kills his unwary guests. And there are also exotic versions, for example that there is a gate to another dimension on the atoll.
Be that as it may, there are few people who would like to visit Palmyra, especially after 1986, when an American radioactive waste dump appeared on the island.

9. Overton Bridge, Scotland

In 1951, a certain dog, for no apparent reason, jumped off this 15-meter bridge. It seemed like just an accident. But by 1955, there were already more than 50 such suicide dogs. Moreover, it is noteworthy that all the dogs always chose the same place for jumping - between the last two spans on the right side of the bridge.
Until now, on average, 1 dog per month jumps from this bridge. Surprisingly, some animals that managed to survive this suicide attempt recovered and went to jump on the bridge again.


Animal behavior expert David Sexton found that the ground just under where the dogs fell was simply filled with traces of mice and minks. The urine of males of these animals has a very strong effect on dogs and cats. A further experiment only confirmed the ethologist’s theory. He spread the scent of animals living under the bridge and observed the behavior of ordinary dogs. As a result, only 2 out of 30 dogs - with short muzzles and small noses - remained calm. The rest mindlessly ran to the source of the smell, practically not looking around, as if under a spell.

10. Aokigahara Forest, Japan

Translated from Japanese, the name of this place sounds like “plain of blue trees.” But most often it is called the “suicide forest.” They say that in the Middle Ages, local poor people, driven to despair by lack of food, brought their elderly relatives here and left them to die in this forest. Since then, restless souls have been wandering through the forest, lying in wait for lonely travelers, wanting to take revenge on them for all their suffering.
Until now, from 70 to 100 bodies of people who have decided to commit suicide are found in the forest every year. Many come to this forest specifically to commit suicide, but there are rumors that the forest itself “persuades” some to do so. It’s as if someone who turns away from the paved walking paths is immediately overcome by severe melancholy and depression. So strong that the poor guy immediately kills himself.


So far, the only fact known for certain is that at the foot of Mount Fuji in the “suicide forest” the compass does not work. There is a strong magnetic anomaly there, which, apparently, has a colossal effect on humans.
Just before the entrance to the Aokigahara territory there is a sign with approximately the following content: “Your life is the most priceless gift that you received from your parents. Think about your family. Don’t suffer alone, call us on 0555-22-0110.”

1.Chinese hollow black bamboo.

In many countries there are so-called “Valleys of Death”, where mysterious and anomalous phenomena regularly occur. One of the strongest anomalous zones in the world is considered to be the Heizhu Valley in southern China, whose name literally translates as “Black Bamboo Hollow.”
Over the years, under mysterious circumstances, many people disappeared without a trace in the ravine, whose bodies were never found. Happens here quite often terrible accidents and people die.
So, in 1950, a plane crashed in the valley for an unknown reason: the ship did not have any technical problems and the crew did not report a disaster. That same year, according to statistics, about 100 people went missing in the ravine!
12 years later, the valley “swallowed” the same number of people - an entire geological exploration group disappeared. Only the guide survived and told what happened.
When the expedition approached the valley, he fell behind a little, at that moment a thick fog suddenly appeared, due to which nothing was visible within a radius of about a meter. The guide, feeling an inexplicable fear, froze in place. A few minutes later, when the fog cleared, the group was no longer there...
The geologists, as well as all their equipment, were never found.
In 1966, a detachment of military cartographers who were engaged in correcting relief maps of this area disappeared here. And in 1976, a group of forest rangers disappeared in a ravine.
There are many versions explaining the anomalous properties of Black Bamboo Hollow - from the effect on human consciousness of vapors emitted by rotting plants and strong geomagnetic radiation to transitions to parallel worlds located in this zone.
Be that as it may, the mystery of the Chinese “Death Valley” has still not been solved, which attracts many tourists here. There is even a souvenir trade here.


2.Valley of headless gold miners in Canada

There is also a valley in northwestern Canada that has a similar dark notoriety. Until the beginning of the 20th century, this desert area had no name: it received its terrible name only in 1908, after the skeletons of gold miners who had disappeared here three years earlier were found beheaded
By the end of the 19th century, the Gold Rush swept the north-west of Canada - in 1897, incredibly large-scale mining of the precious metal was carried out in the famous Klondike.
A year later, the Klondike fever ended, and those who wanted to get rich easily and quickly had to look for new “golden places”. Then six daredevils went to the valley located along the South Nahanni River, which the local Indians avoided.
Gold miners did not pay attention to superstitions. They were never seen alive again. This was the first officially registered case of missing people in this area.
The Canadian police files preserved official data on the valley’s numerous victims: since it received its unattractive name, people regularly disappeared here, and then their bodies were found beheaded.
It is interesting that most of the dead were gold miners, and each of them had a strong physique and could fend for themselves.
It was assumed that bandits were hunting in the Valley of the Headless, or that local residents were thus protecting their gold. The Indians, however, claimed that people were being killed by the local “Bigfoot” - Sasquatch.
In 1978, an expedition led by scientist Henk Mortimer set off for the valley. The six researchers were equipped with the latest technology and, of course, were ready to defend themselves.
Having reached the place, the scientists reported that they had set up a tent and were heading deep into the valley. Towards evening another call came. The operator heard a heart-rending cry: “Emptiness is coming out of the rock! This is terrible...”, after which the connection was interrupted.
Of course, rescuers were immediately sent to the expedition’s camp site, but, having arrived there by helicopter half an hour after the message, they found neither people nor tents. The headless body of one of the researchers was discovered only six days after the tragedy.
After this, the area acquired the glory of a mystical place. And people continued to disappear... In 1997, a group of scientists, anomaly specialists and military personnel went to the uncanny valley, which also disappeared. The last thing they said: “We are surrounded by thick fog”...
The mystery of the murderous valley has not been solved to this day, but despite this, curious tourists continue to visit it willingly.

3.Ghosts of Sable Island in the Atlantic Ocean

In the northern part Atlantic Ocean, approximately 180 km southeast of the coast of Canada, a “nomadic” sickle-shaped fish is drifting Sable Island.
Since this small island was discovered by Europeans, it has instilled real terror in sailors. As soon as they called it: “ship devourer”, “shipwreck island”, “deadly saber”, “ghost island”...
And in our time, Sable is called the “cemetery of the Atlantic.” By the way, its official name in English means black, mourning color (sable).
Of course, it was not by chance that the island became so notorious - shipwrecks actually happened here all the time. Now it’s difficult to say how many ships found their deaths here...
The fact is that in the coastal waters of Sable, navigation is very difficult due to two currents found here - the cold Lambrador and the warm Gulf Stream. Currents create whirlpools, huge waves and movement sand island.
Yes, Sable moves in the ocean waters. To the east, at an approximate speed of 200 meters per year. Moreover, along with the position of the treacherous island, which is difficult to see due to constant fog and giant waves, its size is constantly changing.
So on maps of the 16th century its length was about 300 km, but now it has decreased to 42. It was assumed that the island would soon completely disappear, but over the last century it has, on the contrary, begun to increase
The fate of the wrecked ships was also aggravated by the nature of the local sands - they quickly suck in any objects. Huge ships disappeared completely underground in just 2-3 months.
The last victim The American steamship Manhattan became the insatiable island in 1947. After that, 2 lighthouses and a radio station were installed on Sable - since then the disasters have finally stopped.
Nowadays, about 20 - 25 people permanently live on the island - they service the lighthouses, radio station and local hydrometeorological center, and also know how to conduct rescue operations in case of a shipwreck.
These people work in very difficult conditions, and not only because of the constant fog and hurricane winds - many of them say that they see the ghosts of dead sailors. Not surprising - they literally live on bones.
One of the workers even had to be evacuated from the island, because every night he was begged for help by a ghost with the schooner Sylvia Mosher, which was wrecked here in 1926...

4. Nightmare of Venice-Poveglia

Romantic Venice also has its own mystical places. Not far from the wonderful canals of the city is the island of Poveglia, which has gained the dubious reputation of a real “symbol of horror”.
It all started back in Roman times, when plague victims were brought here to certain death in order to isolate society from them.
In the 14th century, during the second epidemic of this disease, or the Black Death, hopelessly ill Venetians were brought to Poveglia, where, in terrible agony, they said goodbye to life. People were buried in one huge mass grave.
According to legends, due to the fact that there was no time to bury the dead, the bodies were simply burned, so now the soil of the island is half made of human ashes. They say that in total about 160 thousand unfortunate people died here.
In 1922, a psychiatric hospital was opened on the creepy island, “a haven of lost souls.” That’s when the real nightmare began here - patients complained of wild headaches, and at night ghosts appeared to them dead people, the patients heard wild screams and screams...
And in Venice there were rumors that the head doctor of this hospital was himself unwell and was conducting experiments on the mentally ill - testing prohibited drugs and sophisticated healing techniques on them, and in the bell tower of the hospital he was performing a lobotomy using improvised means - chisels, hammers, drills...
If you believe local legends, soon the doctor himself began to see the ghosts of Poveglia, after which, in a fit of madness, he threw himself from that very tower.
In 1968, Poveglia was completely abandoned, now no one lives here, the hospital bell tower serves only as a landmark, and even fishermen try to stay away from damn island- they are afraid of accidentally catching human bones instead of fish.
The authorities, and the Venetians themselves, deny all these rumors - they claim that the island building served only as a rest home for the elderly. However, its dilapidated premises still contain hospital beds and pieces of medical equipment.

5. The ominous Lake Ivachevskoye in Russia

Russia also has its own sinister zones. One of them is located in the Vologda region near the city of Cherepovets - in the area of ​​the local lake Ivachevskoye, on the shores of which people relax both in summer and winter.
Researchers of anomalous phenomena consider this place to be disastrous, since people quite often disappear here without a trace. At the same time, as in any other similar case, there are many explanations for these mysterious phenomena - aliens and monsters, unknown evil forces and transitions to other worlds are blamed for the disappearance of people.
Some who have visited the lake say that when approaching it, their heartbeat and breathing slowed down, and then a feeling of complete serenity appeared. However, already at the very water, calmness was replaced by anxiety, turning into inexplicable fear - it seemed that something hostile was nearby.
Other “eyewitnesses” said that they even felt a certain force that forced them to obey themselves. Perhaps this is why suicides occur so often here.
Four years ago, a group of researchers was sent to the area. As a result, scientists have identified signs of geomagnetic changes in this area that could cause anomalies.
Skeptics find a much more prosaic explanation for the disappearances of people - they blame the swamps located near the lake for all misfortunes.
Moreover, in the 19th century, those same swamps were called Living because of the much greater number of crimes and suicides committed here, in contrast to other Russian provinces.
However, local residents, like skeptics, are sure that Ivachevskoye is a very ordinary lake, since nothing strange happened to them there. I think the truth is somewhere in the middle.

6.Scottish Overtown Bridge.

In the ancient Scottish estate of Overtoun, which is located a few kilometers northwest of the town of Glasgow, there is a stone arched bridge over a small river, built at the end of the 19th century.
Until the middle of the next century, the bridge was very ordinary, and nothing strange was connected with it. And so, in the 50s of the 20th century, completely inexplicable events began to happen here - dogs began to regularly jump from one of its niches, most of which crashed to death, since the height of the bridge is 15 meters.
Surprisingly, the few surviving quadrupeds, despite the pain and wounds, again climbed to that same niche and repeated the suicide attempt, as if some unknown force forced them...
About once a month, a variety of dogs repeated the fate of their unfortunate predecessors. Of course, the appearance mystical legend It didn't take long to wait.
Local residents began to say that the dogs were being pushed to death by two ghosts - the spirit of a child who was thrown from this very place by his own father, and the father himself, who repented and flew after the child.
However, scientists have put forward their hypothesis about the reasons strange phenomenon. The fact is that rodents live under the bridge, and dogs, having smelled them, are just following their hunting instinct. Although this theory does not explain the repeated jumping of dogs, which contradicts the instinct of self-preservation.
Therefore, those who believe in anomalous phenomena suggest that the Overtown Bridge may be some kind of passage to other worlds, and dogs pay with their lives for excessive curiosity.

7. Mysteries of the Bermuda Triangle.

Perhaps the most famous mystical place in the world is the Bermuda Triangle, a section of the Atlantic Ocean between Bermuda, Florida and Puerto Rico.
The name of the Bermuda Triangle has already become a household name and, of course, we have all repeatedly heard stories about the inexplicable and traceless disappearances of ships and planes in it, about ghost ships found here abandoned by the crew, about mysterious movements in time, instantaneous in space and many other creepy things things.
There are also a great many explanations for all these phenomena - some claim that aliens are at work here, others believe that Bermuda Triangle there are temporary or black holes, others suggest that rifts in space are to blame, and some even think that people are being kidnapped by the inhabitants of the disappeared Atlantis!
Skeptics and scientists do not find anything mystical in the notoriety of the triangle - it has been established that this area is very difficult to navigate, since there are many shallows here, and storms and cyclones often arise.
In 1502, the navigator Bermudez came from Spain near the coast of Central America stumbled upon islands surrounded by dangerous shoals and reefs. He called them the Devil's Islands. And only a few decades later they began to be called Bermuda in honor of himself.
Long centuries area Bermuda was recognized as dangerous among travelers, but the unfavorable zone expanded so significantly only in the 20th century.
It all started in 1950, when a correspondent for the Associated Press, one of the world's largest news agencies, wrote about mysterious disappearances in the area, which he called the "Devil's Sea." The famous name appeared only 14 years later in the publication of Vincent Gaddis in one of the spiritualist magazines.
However, the real popularity of the triangle was brought by Charles Berlitz’s 1974 book “The Bermuda Triangle”, where all mysterious cases that occurred in this area.
However, it was later established that some facts in the book were presented incorrectly, and other strange cases occurred completely outside the boundaries of that same triangle.
Opponents of the mystical theory of this area also point out that in many other, most ordinary places on our planet, inexplicable accidents also occur quite often.
Be that as it may, it is unlikely that in the near future we will be able to say with one hundred percent certainty whether there is something mystical in the Bermuda Triangle or not, and also whether mystical phenomena exist at all, or whether everything anomalous has simply not yet been explained by science.
One thing is absolutely clear - rumors, myths and legends never appear out of nowhere.

There are places in Russia that are notorious. Sometimes people disappear there, time is distorted and the compass goes astray.

1. Manpupuners. Komi Republic

Manpupuners, or Weathering Pillars, are located in the Komi Republic. About 200 million years ago there were high mountains here, but water and wind wore down the soft rocks. The Mansi worshiped the pillars as gods, calling this place “Mountain of Stone Idols.”
The legend of the Mansi people says that in the place where the idols now stand, a terrible battle once broke out between their people and the giants. But the angry gods turned the giants to stone. Since then, only the shamans of the Mansi people had the right to climb the mountain to offer prayers to the gods.

2. Ukok plateau. Altai region

Local residents still consider the Ukok plateau sacred place. Shepherds avoid glaciers, trying not to disturb the peace of individual tracts. Only ritual activities are allowed on the plateau.
The most famous discovery made on the plateau is the burial of Ak-Alakha. In 1993, archaeologists discovered the mummy of a young noble woman whose body was covered with tattoos. It turned out that the indigenous population calls her Ak-Kadyn or White Lady. According to their faith, Ak-Kadyn is the keeper of the gates of the underworld.

3. Demon Nose. Karelia

Besov Nos is located on Lake Onega. It is famous for its petroglyphs, which date back to approximately the 3rd millennium BC.

The most famous of them is the 2.3 meter “Demon”, which gave the name to the cape.

The monks who arrived on the cape in the 16th century saw evil in the image, after which they knocked out an eight-pointed cross on top of the “devil”.
Many who have visited the Demon Nose note that the perception of time changes there.

4. Olkhon Island. Lake Baikal

Olkhon Island is the largest of the Baikal islands. Its name is translated from Buryat as “a little wooded.” Archaeologists still find ancient ritual and defensive structures on the island.
Buryat legends say that Olkhon Island is the abode of the spirits of Lake Baikal. The main place of worship was the Shamanka rock or, as it was called before, the Temple Stone. This cape is sacred not only for those who profess shamanism. You can often see Buddhists praying near the rock.

5. Sami labyrinths. Karelia

Stone labyrinths or babylons were built mainly on the shores of the seas or at the mouths of rivers. All labyrinths had cult significance, but historians do not yet know by whom exactly and for what purpose they were built.

Many scientists believe that labyrinths were built on burial grounds so that the soul of the deceased could not leave its resting place.

Babylons are scattered along the shores of the White, Barents and Baltic Seas. There are more than 300 of them in Sweden, about 140 in Finland, and more than 50 in Russia. There are about 500 stone labyrinths in the world. Their diameter can vary from 5 to 30 meters, and their complexity can range from an ordinary spiral to babylons with 6 exits, 5 of which are dead ends.

6. Whale Alley. Chukotka

Scientists believe that the bones of 50 bowhead whales were used to build Whale Alley. Apparently, the alley was built according to a clear design - the bones were dug in opposite each other, and the height of each was about 5 meters.
Historians agree that Whale Alley was a ritual place for the Chukchi tribes, although it is not mentioned in local legends. Scientists believe that the alley could equally have been a sanctuary, a “colosseum” and a place for tribal gatherings.

7. Arkaim. Chelyabinsk region

Arkaim is one of the fortified settlements Southern Urals- “Countries of Cities.” The youngest of these monuments is the same age as the Egyptian pyramids.
Arkaim is associated with many secrets and mysteries.

The layout of the city resembles the sun, and the structure of the rings and the radial direction of the building are oriented according to the stars.

The houses in the “sun city” were multi-apartment, and pottery and metallurgical workshops were found in some buildings. The inhabitants of Arkaim, whose appearance was reconstructed from skulls found in necropolises, belonged to the Caucasian race.

8. Vottovaara. Karelia

For the Sami, Mount Vottovaara had ritual significance. The name of the mountain can be translated as “Mountain of Victory”. Another translation of the name is “ sand mountain, overgrown with forest" (Trans. Sami: vuots - “sand”; vaara - “mountain overgrown with forest”).

At the top of Vottovaara there are many seids - huge boulders that were placed on “legs” of smaller stones.

On the mountain itself, people often experience a strange malaise; electronic devices begin to malfunction.

9. Kashkulak cave. Khakassia

Now the Kashkulak cave is tourist site. But two thousand years ago, the first tier was used by local shamans as a ritual hall. The walls of the Temple Grotto are still covered with soot from numerous sacrifices.

The Kashkulat cave appears in many legends, most often quite gloomy ones.

People disappear in it, strange sounds are heard, and local residents claim that the spirit of an evil shaman lives in the cave.
Oddly enough, today Khakass shamans again perform rituals in the Temple Grotto. Psychics are not far behind - they conduct their training in the cave.

10. Dolmens. Western Caucasus

The purpose of the Caucasian dolmens is not precisely determined, but many archaeologists adhere to the version that these are tombs of the megalithic era. Dolmens were built mainly from sandstone.

The methods for manufacturing and transporting the slabs to the installation site are still unclear.

Many people feel mood swings when they are near dolmens. The reasons for these anomalies are also unknown.

11. Patriarch's Ponds. Moscow

It was not for nothing that Bulgakov made the Patriarch’s the place where Woland first appeared in Moscow. Legends about the appearance of the devil to people arose when the place was still called “Three Ponds”. The ponds were named Patriarchal after frightened local residents asked the Patriarch of Moscow to consecrate the place.

12. Valley of Ghosts. Crimea

On the slopes of Mount Demerdzhi (from the Crimean Tatar - Kuznets) there is a valley, which local residents nicknamed the Valley of Ghosts.

The main attraction of this place is the stone “mushrooms”, which arose due to weathering and washing out of rocks.

In summer, on the slopes of Demerdzhi you can see bizarre mirages. In winter and autumn there are terrible fogs here, because of which it seems that stone pillars are moving and changing shape in the haze. Because of the fogs, the rock was called Funa or “smoking” in ancient times.

13. Ayu-Dag. Crimea

Local legends say that Ayu-Dag or Bear Mountain was actually once a giant bear. An angry god sent him to destroy a tribe that had forgotten their faith, but the giant saw the beauty of Crimea and refused to obey his master. In a fit of anger, the deity turned the bear to stone when he went down to the sea to drink.
Archaeologists claim that Ayu-Dag had ritual significance for the tribes that lived here in ancient times. Ancient temples and burial grounds were discovered at the top of the mountain.

14. Lake Teletskoye. Altai

Lake Teletskoye is the second largest lake in our country in terms of fresh water reserves. Even in winter the lake does not freeze completely.
There is a dark legend about the “forest of the dead” at the bottom of the lake.

With comparatively small size Lake Teletskoye is quite deep - up to 325 meters at the Korbu waterfall.

At the same time, the temperature at depth, even at the height of summer, does not exceed 4°C. Therefore, at a depth of more than 100 meters, bodies are “canned” and remain there.

15. Vasyugan swamps. Western Siberia

The Vasyugan swamps are sometimes called the “Russian Amazon”. The swamps stretch for 573 km from west to east. Their area is constantly growing and already exceeds 53 thousand square meters. km (this is more area Switzerland). Over the past 500 years, 75% of the swamp has formed.

The Vasyugan swamps are at least 10,000 years old.

Local residents willingly tell legends that these swamps were created by a devil who tried to hide the land from God.

16. Mount Kholatchakhl. Ural

Legend says that during a terrible flood, 10 men and one woman were saved on the slopes of the mountain. They climbed to the top to escape the flood, but the waves managed to take the 9th men. They gave rise to the Mansi people, and the mountain that saved them was called Kholotchahl or Mountain of the Dead.
The mountain gained fame due to a terrible incident in 1959, when Dyatlov’s group died on an unnamed pass. The circumstances of their death are still unknown.

17. Death Valley. Kamchatka

The valley on the slopes of the Kikhpinych volcano was first discovered in 1975. Then it became clear that the air in the valley could be deadly poisonous. The fumes contain a critical amount of carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and sometimes hydrocyanic acid, which leads to suffocation and paralysis of the lungs.

Cape Ryty is replete with rich pastures, but there are no human settlements nearby.
Locals consider the cape dangerous place and they call him Kher-Khushun - angry, angry cape.

There is a legend that due to the feud of three tribes in this place, an angry spirit brought down a mudflow on them.

No real evidence of this legend has been found. But archaeologists discovered a stone wall at Cape Rytny, the purpose of which is unknown, stone tours and pots, which were most likely used as lamps.

20. Lake Pleshcheyevo. Pereslavl-Zalessky

Lake Pleshcheyevo is quite famous in Russian history. Here Peter I built his amusing fleet, and a monument to the emperor’s boat was erected here.
But local old-timers consider the lake a mystical place.

Sometimes tourists get lost in the fog on the coast and find themselves days later, many of them losing their sense of time.

Here, on Lake Pleshcheyevo, there is the Blue Stone, a ritual pagan object. It was recorded that the stone was moved from place to place several times. Scientists believe that it was moved by ice, and draw an analogy with the crawling stones from Death Valley, USA.

 

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