Enigmatic Locations That Leave Scientists Perplexed, Including the Astonishing ‘Walking Rocks

Although science develops, there are still places in the world where scientists have to give up, it is difficult to explain the strange phenomena that occur or form these places. Places like these always make scientists nervous to find out how they were formed, and why such a magical place can exist? These places will make you wonder not only because they are so beautiful but also because they don’t seem to follow any scientific laws on earth.

1. Eternal Fire Falls (USA)

In a small cave behind a waterfall in Chesnut Ridge Park, in the New York suburb of Buffalo, there is something like a mirage: a flickering golden flame that burns forever, despite the water flowing around. You can even smell the burning smell from a distance! This undying flame is the result of a natural gas rift in the cliff, small enough to sustain a flickering flame without being too large to pose a danger.

2. Stonehenge (England)

Stonehenge is one of the most mysterious places on the planet. The work is a ring of 30 vertical stone blocks (25 tons each), connected by horizontal bars, inside the circle there are 5 pairs of stone blocks with horizontal bars above. The special thing is that the soil here has not been touched, but the structure of the grass inside the rings has changed, as if the grass “lays” on its own in a necessary order. The rocks at Stoneheng always make researchers from all over the world have a headache to find out. What is the meaning behind this work, who left it to us, for what purpose and the reason for the appearance of the rocks so far no one has been able to answer.

3. Magnet Hill or Gravity Hill (India)

At 3,352m above sea level, Magnet Hill is one of the must-see spots on the way to Leh, Ladakh, India. This place is famous for its magnetic feature that can pull automatic cars to move on hills without starting the engine and cause planes flying by to jerk. Despite being said to have such strange powers, scientists believe the car climbing uphill is simply an illusion. However, no matter how many theories are proposed, the mystery of Magnet Hill will forever remain an inexplicable mystery.

4. Lake Maracaibo (Venezuela)

Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela is the world’s most lightning-hit place, with an average of 250 lightning strikes per square kilometer per year. It is also home to about 260 hurricanes annually. Scientists have been working for many years to explain the unusual intensity of storms and lightning here. Initially, in the 60s of the 20th century, it was thought that uranium deposits attracted a lot of lightning. Recently, there is a theory that the increased conductivity of the air above the lake leads to more lightning strikes. However, these hypotheses have not been proven.

5. Blood Falls (Antarctica)

First discovered by geologist Griffith Taylor Thomas in 1911, Blood Falls is striking with a striking au red stain against the white snow of Taylor Glacier. A team of microbiologists came to study and came to the conclusion that the mysterious red water actually came from an iron-rich underground lake below. It is also reported that this strange phenomenon comes from a species of bacteria that lives 400 meters deep under the ice.

6. Rock “walking” (USA)

Why can inanimate rocks “surf” on arid sand? That is the question of a strange natural phenomenon in Death Valley, California, which up to now, 100 years later, has not been answered. Is there a supernatural force in the universe that causes them to move? While physicists are still conducting research, their mystery is what makes visitors curious and come to more.

7. River Caño Cristales (Colombia)

The Caño River in the Serrania de la Macarena National Park in Central Colombia is known as one of the most beautiful rivers in the world. This place is also known as the five-color river, the water rainbow… From September to November each year, the river has colors of yellow, blue, green, black and red, creating an extremely beautiful scene. According to legend, below the river lies the treasure of La Mojana (Goddess of Water).

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