If travel broadens our horizons and horror heightens our senses, the two
combined pack a powerful punch. Looking for an adventure this year? Look
no further.
From
a temple crawling with thousands of rats, to an island swarming with
flesh-melting snakes – question-and-answer site Quora uncovered some of
the most disturbing, bone-chilling and goosebump-inducing places on
Earth.
Looking for an adventure this year? Look no further.
When summer came and the ice melted, hundreds of
more skeletons were revealed, some with flesh and hair still attached.
Who, or what, had killed so many people, turning a remote high-altitude
lake in an uninhabited part of the Himalayas into a mass grave?
Everyone from locals to expert anthropologists speculated on how Skeleton Lake came to be, wrote Varun Ojha. Theories ranged from epidemics to landslides to ritual suicides.
A 2004 expedition offered more clues. The skeletons were the remains of 200 to 300 people dating to back the 9th Century, and were divided into two distinct groups: a closely related family or tribe, and a smaller, shorter group of locals. They were found with rings, spears, leather shoes and bamboo sticks. Short, deep cracks in the skulls suggested all of the bodies appeared to have died in the same way, from blows to the head from rounded objects, not weapons.
All 200 to 300 people, scientists concluded,
died from a hailstorm of biblical proportions. Thousands of cricket
ball-sized, hard-as-iron hailstones pounded the heads and shoulders of a
group of pilgrims and their porters travelling through the area.
Trapped in a valley with nowhere to hide, the entire group perished in a
mass death that still fascinates fearless visitors to this day.
Travellers to the region can still see the skeletons, although summer is the best time to visit as the bones at the lake’s bottom can only be seen when the ice melts.
Snake Island, as it’s called, is home to an
estimated 4,000 venomous Bothrops insularis, also known as golden
lanceheads, a critically endangered species that got trapped on the
island when rising sea levels covered up the land that connected it to
the mainland. The Brazilian navy closed the island in the 1920s to
protect the snakes from humans – and to protect humans from the deadly
snakes. The golden lanceheads grow to more than half a metre long and
possess a fast-acting poison that melts human flesh. According to some
estimates, there is one snake to every square metre of the island.
“The venom causes a grab bag of symptoms, which includes kidney failure, necrosis of muscular tissue, brain hemorrhaging, and intestinal bleeding. Scary stuff, to be sure,” explained Smriti Iyer.
The Temple of Rats, located deep in Rajasthan’s Thar desert, houses some 20,000 black rats that are free to roam the place of worship freely. Thousands of religious pilgrims, as well as curious tourists, visit the temple every year, eager for the blessings of the holy rats.
According to local legend, when the stepson of Hindu deity Karni Mata drowned in a pond, Karni Mata asked the death god Yama to revive him. Yama eventually relented, but only under the condition that the stepson, and all of his caste, be reincarnated as rats.
Known as “little children” by worshippers and
temple caretakers, the rats are fed milk, grains, coconut shells and
specially prepared sweets by temple caretakers and worshippers. Because
food that the rats have nibbled is said to bring good fortune, some
religious pilgrims even partake of the leftovers.
“It’s quite the experience to walk through a
temple with rats scuttling around as free as can be, and eating out of
the same offerings that you're given back to consume,” wrote Prayash
Giria.
In fact, the ground beneath the rig was a massive natural gas field, which collapsed into a gaping crater upon the scientists’ arrival, swallowing the rig and their camp. Fearing the spread of poisonous methane gas, the scientists set the crater on fire, ripping open a hellish pit of vicious flames just beneath their feet. They hoped the gases would burn off within a few days or weeks.
That was four decades ago. Today, the 70m-wide, 30m-deep crater continues to burn so feverishly that locals have named the fearsome abyss of fire, flames and boiling mud the “Door to Hell”.
“It seems that the dangerous pit of fire will never stop burning,” wrote Aditya Basu. But
that hasn’t stopped tens of thousands of travellers – some of whom even camp on the gas field – from visiting the seemingly-eternal inferno, a real-life hell on Earth.
According to local legend, a girl drowned in the
Xochimilco canals outside of Mexico City decades ago. After her
untimely death, dolls began washing up on the shore of a small island in
the canal where she died. Tormented that he couldn’t save the girl, the
island’s caretaker, Don Julian Santana Barrera, began to hang the dolls
from the island’s trees in her memory.
The Island of Dolls is now “dedicated to the lost soul of a poor girl who met her fate too soon in strange circumstances”, Rushali Ramteke said.
Over the years, the trees have filled with the
mangled remains of dolls, their mutilated limbs and severed heads
rotting in the moist air. Locals say the dolls are possessed with the
dead girl’s spirit, and witnesses claim they’ve heard the dolls
whispering to each other, luring visitors to the island.
That’s not the end of the story. Some 50 years after collecting dolls and hanging them across the island, Barrera himself was found drowned in the exact spot where the girl had died decades earlier.
Since Barrera’s death in 2001, the island, which is actually a floating garden, has seen hundreds of visitors – some of which even bring their own dolls to add to the haunting collection.
Looking for an adventure this year? Look no further.
A glacial lake full of human skeletons
In 1942, a forest ranger hiking near India’s Roopkund Lake, perched some 5,029m in the Himalayas, stumbled across a startling discovery: the shallow, glacial lake was surrounded by human skeletons.
Nobody can be sure
why these skeletons are at the bottom of a glacial lake (Credit:
Schwiki/Human Skeletons in Roopkund Lake/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 4.0)
Everyone from locals to expert anthropologists speculated on how Skeleton Lake came to be, wrote Varun Ojha. Theories ranged from epidemics to landslides to ritual suicides.
A 2004 expedition offered more clues. The skeletons were the remains of 200 to 300 people dating to back the 9th Century, and were divided into two distinct groups: a closely related family or tribe, and a smaller, shorter group of locals. They were found with rings, spears, leather shoes and bamboo sticks. Short, deep cracks in the skulls suggested all of the bodies appeared to have died in the same way, from blows to the head from rounded objects, not weapons.
A dark secret lurks at the bottom of this Himalayan lake (Abhijeet Rane/Roopkund - Mystery Lake/Flickr/CC BY 2.0)
Travellers to the region can still see the skeletons, although summer is the best time to visit as the bones at the lake’s bottom can only be seen when the ice melts.
An island swarming with flesh-melting snakes
Visiting Brazil’s Ilha da Queimada Grande is forbidden. That’s because the island, located 33km off the state of Sao Paulo, is swarming with venomous snakes.
The snake’s venom
can cause kidney failure, brain hemorrhaging and many other alarming
ailments (Credit: Danelo-commonswiki assumed/Eyelash Pit Viper
01/Wikipedia/CC BY 2.5)
“The venom causes a grab bag of symptoms, which includes kidney failure, necrosis of muscular tissue, brain hemorrhaging, and intestinal bleeding. Scary stuff, to be sure,” explained Smriti Iyer.
The temple crawling with black rats
A religious and tourist destination, India’s Karni Mata Temple is a site of both reverence and revulsion. That’s because the famous Hindu temple is crawling with thousands of rodents.
The Temple of Rats, located deep in Rajasthan’s Thar desert, houses some 20,000 black rats that are free to roam the place of worship freely. Thousands of religious pilgrims, as well as curious tourists, visit the temple every year, eager for the blessings of the holy rats.
According to local legend, when the stepson of Hindu deity Karni Mata drowned in a pond, Karni Mata asked the death god Yama to revive him. Yama eventually relented, but only under the condition that the stepson, and all of his caste, be reincarnated as rats.
According to local legend, these black rats are the reincarnation of a Hindu deity and his caste (Credit: Don Mammoser/Alamy)
Temple caretakers
ensure the rats have milk, grain and other treats to enjoy (Credit:
Fulvio Spada/Breakfast time!/Flickr/ CC BY-SA 2.0)
A real-life hell on Earth
It was a scientific expedition gone horribly wrong. In 1971, a group of Soviet scientists set up a drilling rig to assess what they thought was a substantial oil field in the middle of Turkmenistan’s Karakum Desert.
In fact, the ground beneath the rig was a massive natural gas field, which collapsed into a gaping crater upon the scientists’ arrival, swallowing the rig and their camp. Fearing the spread of poisonous methane gas, the scientists set the crater on fire, ripping open a hellish pit of vicious flames just beneath their feet. They hoped the gases would burn off within a few days or weeks.
That was four decades ago. Today, the 70m-wide, 30m-deep crater continues to burn so feverishly that locals have named the fearsome abyss of fire, flames and boiling mud the “Door to Hell”.
“It seems that the dangerous pit of fire will never stop burning,” wrote Aditya Basu. But
that hasn’t stopped tens of thousands of travellers – some of whom even camp on the gas field – from visiting the seemingly-eternal inferno, a real-life hell on Earth.
An island of haunted dolls
Thanks to an unfortunate accident, the beautiful floating gardens of Mexico’s Isla de las Munecas are now the stuff of ghastly nightmares.
A horrific accident
transformed this beautiful floating garden into the stuff of nightmares
(Credit: Esparta Palma/I see dead dolls/Flickr/CC BY 2.0)
The Island of Dolls is now “dedicated to the lost soul of a poor girl who met her fate too soon in strange circumstances”, Rushali Ramteke said.
The caretaker of
Isla de las Munecas began hanging the dolls in memory of the young girl
who died (Credit: Kevin/Flickr/ CC BY 2.0)
That’s not the end of the story. Some 50 years after collecting dolls and hanging them across the island, Barrera himself was found drowned in the exact spot where the girl had died decades earlier.
Since Barrera’s death in 2001, the island, which is actually a floating garden, has seen hundreds of visitors – some of which even bring their own dolls to add to the haunting collection.
No comments:
Post a Comment