Imagine
a world where the mountains are striped with candy colours and people
are dwarfed by the landscape’s immensity. Such a place exists in China’s
northwestern Gansu Province, where 24 million years of vibrant stone
and mineral deposits have created rainbow-striped mountains.
The tinted peaks were fashioned by uplift from the Earth’s tectonic
plates – the same ones that formed parts of the Himalayan range – while
rain, wind and erosion shaped them into the jagged world seen today.
Located around the city of Zhangye, the area covers more than 10sqkm and
the vista is most dazzling after a rainfall, when the colours glow even
brighter than usual. (Melinda Chan/Getty).
Oregon’s painted hills

Ash, clay, minerals and decaying plant matter all mixed into the
soil, leaving pronounced streaks of gold, black, red – even purple and
blue. The colours change according to the air’s moisture level, and are
said to be most vivid come late afternoon. (Purestock/Getty).
Ethiopia’s alien crater

Dallol lies near the border of Eritrea in an area that was closed to
foreigners until 2001. Even today it is prudent to travel with an armed
guard, as border tensions persist and kidnappings have been known to
happen. Because of this, only a few hundred visitors make it to this
remarkable landscape every year – which is probably for the best
considering the fragility of the landform, the toxic gases and the
temperatures that average above 30C. (Thierry Hennet/Getty)
Wyoming’s ultimate spring

Light up the night in Iceland

source : BBCTRAVEL
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