No matter how advanced technology is and how smart humans are, there are still mysterious places and lands in the world that have yet to be discovered.

- Forest Lake in Russia
The exact location of this mysterious lake is unknown. According to some, it can be found in the Tyumen region of Russia. To this day, no one knows how it got so deep in the forest.
- Tepui in Venezuela
The word ‘Tepui’ means “home of the gods” in the language of the indigenous people of Gran Sabana, where these incredible and terrifying natural structures are located.
- Honokohau Falls in Maui
This remote place is filled with greenery. Just looking at it gives you a sense of the exquisite, majestic and mysterious beauty of the natural world. Just imagine what it would be like to travel there.

- Amazon Rainforest
This astonishingly vast forest stretches across nine different countries in South America: Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana. It is so vast that humanity can never hope to explore it all – or know everything that is hidden there.
- Gangkhar Puensum in Bhutan
This is the world’s highest mountain yet to be climbed by humans. It is located in disputed territory between Bhutan and China and stands at 7,570 metres high.
- Tsingy de Bemaraha, Madagascar’s ‘stone forest’
The rocky outcrops and canyons formed over a period of a million years, mostly underground in the form of giant caves. Over the years, monsoon rains have washed away metres of limestone and thick layers of chalk sediment, creating a unique system of natural bridges, spires and canyons that can be as deep as 120 metres.
- Kerguelen Islands
Tucked away in the southern part of the vast Indian Ocean, these islands lie far from their homeland in France. There are no planes or tourists to them, and the only way to get there is by boat from the island of Réunion, near Madagascar.

- Rock Islands, Palau
To modern human civilization, the Rock Islands are a remote and mysterious part of the world. However, at some point in the last few thousand years, we can be certain that humans have set foot on them. We know this because archaeologists have found evidence of the so-called ‘little people’ – a branch of the human species that once lived there.
- Dallol, Ethiopia
Today, salt mining takes place in the vicinity of the Dallol Volcano, so it is not exactly a pristine area. But the area right next to the volcano is, of course, uninhabitable.
- Palmyra Atoll
Located in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, south of the Hawaiian Islands, this uninhabited island is said to be home to a mysterious, magical force.