Top 10 Scariest Places You Shouldn't Visit
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Top 10 Scariest Places You Shouldn't Visit
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Top Ten scariest Places You shouldn't Visit
Most of the world is beautiful. We've got beautiful lakes, awesome mountains and sights that would
make most people stare in wonder and amazement.
But that's not all there is to the earth. On this fair green planet, there are also places so scary that you
wouldn't believe that they even exist. Places so scary that only a handful of human beings would be able
to go and come back without a mental breakdown.
And today, we'll be taking a tour of these places. Buckle up for a ride that will scare you into pieces.
10 North Yungas Road, Bolivia
And that is the story of the North Yungas Road, a lonely road that weaves through the jungles of the
Amazon. The road is in Bolivia, and it is surely one place that you shouldn't want to be caught in. But if
you ever have to cross the North Yungas road, you must learn a few things about it.
First off, the road is nicknamed the Death Road. Yes. The Death Road. Generally speaking, you should
avoid areas with such scary names, but if you need more reasons, we've got you.
The road winds through the Amazon at a height of more than fifteen thousand feet. It's a 12-foot-wide
single lane without guardrails. It has limited visibility due to rain and fog, and what's more— about
three to five hundred people die yearly from travelling on the road. Of course, you can ask why so many
people take the road when it is so dangerous. But the road is the only way for rural people to get from
their communities and into the city— so people have no other choice.
9 Nagaro, Japan
Nagaro is just a small village in Japan. And like your regular small village, it has very few people. It has
small shops, small houses, small roads, and even a small hospital. But that's not all about Nagoro.
There a peculiarity that stands the village out, and it's this; it has a life-sized doll population. And that's
not all. The population of the life-sized doll creatures outnumbers the human population about ten to
one. Yes, you heard that right. For every human being, there are ten life-sized dolls.
How did the dolls get there? Were they spontaneous appearances? Did some ghost drop them they?
Were they created by a spell?
Well, no. The answer is more straightforward than you'd expect. The dolls are the work of Tsukimi
Ayano, a resident who started making the dolls whenever her neighbours die or moved away. The
strange and scary dolls can be found on almost every corner of the village in a multitude of everyday
positions. Some are standing, some are sitting, and some are just eating at the local restaurant.
Today, there are about 350 dolls in Nagoro, and there are about only thirty living human beings in the
village, making it a scary place to be.
8 The Blood Falls
At first glance, this glacier in the middle of the Antarctic looks like somewhere a gruesome murder has
just occurred on. What looks like blood— or what looks like blood to the untrained eye, runs down the
glacier in the scariest of ways.
If you'd been told straight out of the blues that this was the sight of a gruesome murder, you'd probably
have believed. It's little wonder the Glacier is called blood falls.
Strangely, the blood falls are an actual natural wonder. The origin of the falls can be traced back about
five million years when the glacier sealed off a microbe-rich lake beneath it. The lake was isolated from
oxygen and light and thus made the water very concentrated both in terms of iron and salt content.
The water's salinity level keeps it from freezing, while the iron provides the colour. It then seeps out
through a fissure in the glacier, and we get to witness the incredible display.
7 Centralia, Pennsylvania
When people imagine the scariest of places, they generally don't think of places in the first world. They
like to have a sense of security that tells them that this. . .despite how scary it is, could never happen
here.
Most times, they are right. Other times? They are wrong.
Centralia is a town in the middle of Pennsylvania. Or at least it was a town. In the 60s, the twin was
bubbling with people and happiness. Its coal mines were prosperous and everyone was relatively happy.
However, the happiness wasn't to last for too long.
In 1962, a mine in the town mysteriously caught fire, and it started to spread rapidly underground
through interconnecting tunnels.
The question, of course, is this; what did the townspeople do when they discovered that their town is
literally ON fire? Well, nothing, for the most part.
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