Tribute to Planet Earth 🌎 ♥️

Marble Caves, Patagonia:

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Antelope Canyon, Arizona:

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Lake Sørvágsvatn, Faroe Islands:

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Sigiriya, Sri Lanka:

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Fly Geyser, Nevada, USA: Fly Geyser was accidentally created when scalding water began erupting through a man-made well in 1964. Dissolved minerals developed the mount and terraces that now surround the geyser, which continues to grow and release water up to five feet in the air.



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Dallol Volcano, Ethiopia: Dallol volcano is located in the Danakil Depression in NE Ethiopia, in a remote area subject to the highest average temperatures on the planet.




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Zhangye Danxia Landform In Gansu, China: Zhangye Danxia National Geological Park is in the eastern foothills of the Qilian Mountains in Gansu Province, China.



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Son Doong Cave, Vietnam: The biggest cave on the planet when measured by cross-section. Discovered and explored for the first time in 2009. Only open to the public since 2013. Unique for the two enormous dolines (cave roof collapses) and underground rainforests. Home to the "Great Wall of Vietnam," a 90m high calcite barrier.



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Glowing Beach In Maldives: The beach is a part of Vaadhoo Island, which is one of the islands of Raa Atoll in Maldives. It's actually a small island with not more than 500 people. However, the island has earned itself a place on the global tourism map owing to its Sea of Stars phenomenon.



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Monte Roraima – Venezuela.


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Socotra, Yemen



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Giants Causeway In Northern Ireland: The Giant's Causeway lies at the foot of the basalt cliffs along the sea coast on the edge of the Antrim plateau in Northern Ireland. It is made up of some 40,000 massive black basalt columns sticking out of the sea. The dramatic sight has inspired legends of giants striding over the sea to Scotland. Geological studies of these formations over the last 300 years have greatly contributed to the development of the earth sciences, and show that this striking landscape was caused by volcanic activity during the Tertiary, some 50–60 million years ago.



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Pamukkale, Turkey: Pamukkale is a town in western Turkey known for the mineral-rich thermal waters flowing down white travertine terraces on a nearby hillside. It neighbors Hierapolis, an ancient Roman spa city founded around 190 B.C. Ruins there include a well-preserved theater and a necropolis with sarcophagi that stretch for 2km. The Antique Pool is famous for its submerged Roman columns, the result of an earthquake.



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Emerald Ice On Baikal Lake, Russia: Lake Baikal in southern Siberia, remains covered with ice for almost five months a year.



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Red Beach, Panjin, China: Red Beach, Panjin is a reed-covered wetland in one of the world's largest reed marsh areas, the Liaohe River Delta.
 
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