December 26, 2024 00:11 AM

Outer Space Landscapes you Can Visit on Earth

It's been bound to happen yet in 2016 Virgin Galactic will launch a commercial service to space. In any case, shouldn't something be said about simple mortals who can't manage the cost of the $250,000 price tag to board a Richard Branson rocket? All things considered, you don't need to travel a couple light years to find the experience of space scene. Truth be told, you can do it from the comfort of your own planet.

Salt Flats, Bolivia

Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia is the world's biggest salt level. Like the rough and barren surface of the moon, there's not a drop of water in sight in this salty horizon unless you're going by in January, when it downpours on less than five days on average.

Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, Rotorua, New Zealand

This dynamic geothermal zone close Rotorua is renowned for its foaming mud pools and steaming boiling hot water vents. Rotorua has even gotten NASA's consideration. The association wants to open a portion of the secrets of life on different planets by concentrating on harsh situations like this.

Lake Baikal, Russia

Lake Baikal is known to be the deepest, most established and clearest freshwater lake on the planet. It's frozen in the middle of January and April, but in March the ice splits, making incredibly transparent, blue or emerald squares, or shards of glass-like solidified water.

Lake Eyre, South Australia

At the point when the lake is dry, which is just about constantly, it looks about as uninhabitable as a spot can get. It's the most minimal spot on the Australian territory, and it's really remote, being found 697km north of Adelaide.

Lake Natron, Tanzania

Pretty but dangerous, this present lake's alkaline levels are high to the point that it embalms any creature who sets out to drink from it. Pelicans transformed into powdery sodium carbonate stores glide along its surface.

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