most photogenic and breathtaking places in the world

Most Photogenic and breathtaking places in the world

world's amazingly photogenic locations with breathtaking beauty to enjoy.
41. Split View Galapagos Islands
The Galapagos islands are the most famous wildlife viewing destination in the entire world.It is a chance in a lifetime to watch the wild animals which are found only here which is also zoologists dreams.It is a home like place to numerous animals.It also has the richest marine ecosystem in the world with its volcanic lava flowsunique type of wild life and biological life.
42. Hotel La Montana Magica Huilo Chile
The water in these places has great purity and from the idea of showing the energy and life of this element born the project of a mountain from which comes the life and contains the magic of the forest finding in each of its details the beings and elements that are unique and irreplaceable what came to life the native forests.
43. Dunnottar Castle
Visit Dunnottar Castle for an unforgettable experience. A dramatic and evocative ruined cliff top fortress in a truly stunning setting. As you wander around the extensive buildings - from the keep through the barracks lodgings stables and storehouses to the less-ruinous chapel and drawing room - you will discover the importance of Dunnottar an impregnable Castle that holds many rich secrets of Scotlands colourful past.William Wallace Mary Queen of Scots the Marquis of Montrose and the future King Charles II all graced the Castle with their presence. Most famously though it was at Dunnottar Castle that a small garrison held out against the might of Cromwells army for eight months and saved the Scottish Crown Jewels the Honours of Scotland from destruction. Crown sceptre and sword now take pride of place in Edinburgh Castle.A darker chapter in the history of Dunnottar is that of the Whigs Vault. The gruesome story of the imprisonment in 1685 of a group of Covenanters who refused to acknowledge the Kings supremacy in spiritual matters.The Castle was the home of the Earls Marischal once one of the most powerful families in the land. The last Earl was convicted of treason for his part in the Jacobite rising of 1715 and as a result his estates including Dunnottar were seized by the government.The buildings were thereafter much neglected until 1925 when the 1st Viscountess Cowdray embarked on a systematic repair of the Castle. The Castle was officially made open to visitors thereafter.
44. Coastal Potholes
Geology is a branch of science which includes the study of the Earth rocks etc. It gives an insight to the history of the Earth as it provides evidence of plate tectonics features of the Earth in the past past climatic conditions etc.Any of the various coastal features present along any coast as a result of a combination of processes sediments and the geology of the coast itself are known as coastal land-forms. The coastal environment is made up of a wide variety of land-forms established in a variety of sizes and shapes ranging from the slope of the beach the small potholes formed along the shores to the high cliffs. Yet coastal land-forms are characterized into two broad categories: depositional formations and erosional formations. The formation of coastal potholes is an example of erosional formation.
45. Nottingham Castle
Nottingham Castle is a castle in Nottingham England. It is located in a commanding position on a natural promontory known as Castle Rock with cliffs 130 feet (40 m) high to the south and west. In the Middle Ages it was a major royal fortress and occasional royal residence. In decline by the 16th century it was largely demolished in 1649 with the Duke of Newcastle later building a mansion on the site. This was burnt out by rioters in 1831 and left as a ruined shell by the Dukes later being adapted to create an art gallery and museum which the building is still used as today. Little of the original castle survives but sufficient portions remain to give an impression of the layout of the site.
46. Beautiful Venice Italy
Venice teeters on the edge of cliche with its lacework of canals its domes and gilded spires its kiosks with straw gondolier hats and refrigerator magnets in the shape of the Piazza San Marco. Postcard fodder and yet.Venice is beautiful improbably so a centaur-like hybrid neither land nor water but somewhere in between as it lifts from the green of the Adriatic. The city is drenched in so-exquisite-it-hurts beauty: the tracery of arches in the Doges Palace the pinpoint of lights from boats in the lagoon at night. The grime of centuries eats at its stones but the decay is luscious. The seduction proceeds.It has been so for centuries. To be a tourist in Venice is to join a procession reaching back to the 14th century when pilgrims stopped en route to the Holy Land. To capitalize on its geography as the departure point for voyages to the East the canny Venetians created festivals to coincide with the influx a hint of the commercialism to come.Irritating that wallet-squeeze but one you inevitably force yourself to stomach particularly when catching sight of the Venice silhouette for the first time from the mainland shore of the lagoon. To get at the essence of Venice we asked the experts a group of professional photographers what they see when they look at the city. From their most treasured scenes to their favorite hotels theyve given us five beautiful reasons to love this city even more than we already do.
47. Split Pinnacle Hunan China
Hunan is a province of the Peoples Republic of China located in the south-central part of the country to the south of the middle reaches of the Yangtze River and south of Lake Dongting (hence the name Hunan which means south of the lake). Hunan is sometimes called and officially abbreviated as (pinyin: Xi?ng) for short after the Xiang River which runs through the province.Hunan borders Hubei in the north Jiangxi to the east Guangdong to the southeast Guangxi to the southwest Guizhou to the west and Chongqing to the northwest. The capital is Changsha.
48. Valley of Ten Peaks
Valley of the Ten Peaks is a valley in Banff National Park in Alberta Canada which is crowned by ten notable peaks and also includes Moraine Lake. The valley can be reached by following the Moraine Lake road near Lake Louise. The ten peaks were originally named by Samuel Allen an early explorer of the region who simply referred to them by using the numerals from one to ten in the Stoney First Nations Language. He may have learnt the terms from his Native American guides who helped him with the horses. The Nakoda - also known as the Stoney Indians - is a tribe whose culture and dialect are closely related to that of the Assiniboine First Nation from whom they are believed to have separated in the mid-1700s and who roamed large parts of the prairies and mountains of western Alberta well into British Columbia. The secluded Valley of the Ten Peaks was part of their original homeland. Gradually though all but three of the mountains were renamed in honour of noteworthy individuals including Allen himself.
49. Atlantic Ocean Road in Norway
The Atlantic Ocean Road or the Atlantic Road (Norwegian: Atlanterhavsveien) is a 8.3-kilometer (5.2 mi) long section of County Road 64 that runs through an archipelago in Eide and Averoy in More og Romsdal Norway. It passes by Hustadvika an unsheltered part of the Norwegian Sea connecting the island of Averoy with the mainland and Romsdalshalvoya peninsula. It runs between the villages of Karvag on Averoy and Vevang in Eida. It is built on several small islands and skerries which are connected by several causeways viaducts and eight bridges the most prominent being Storseisundet Bridge. The route was originally proposed as a railway line in the early 20th century but this was abandoned. Serious planning of the road started in the 1970s and construction started on 1 August 1983. During construction the area was hit by 12 European windstorms. The road was opened on 7 July 1989 having cost 122 million Norwegian krone (NOK) of which 25 percent was financed with tolls and the rest from public grants. Collection of tolls was scheduled to run for 15 years but by June 1999 the road was paid off and the toll removed. The road is preserved as a cultural heritage site and is classified as a National Tourist Route. It is a popular site to film automotive commercials has been declared the worlds best road trip and been awarded the title as Norwegian Construction of the Century. In 2009 the Atlantic Ocean Tunnel opened from Averoy to Kristiansund together they form a second fixed link between Kristiansund and Molde.
50. Cabin in the Woods
The Cabin in the Woods is a 2012 American satirical horror film directed by Drew Goddard in his directorial debut produced by Joss Whedon and written by Whedon and Goddard. The film stars Kristen Connolly Chris Hemsworth Anna Hutchison Fran Kranz and Jesse Williams. Goddard and Whedon having worked together previously on Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel wrote the screenplay in three days describing it as an attempt to revitalize the slasher film genre and as a critical satire on torture porn. The A.V. Club elaborating on this description wrote Where Scream put a postmodern twist on slasher films The Cabin in the Woods takes on the whole genre and twists even harder... The script brings to the fore Whedons love of subverting cliches while embracing them and teasing out their deeper meaning.