2. Truk Lagoon in Micronesia: Truk Lagoon is located in the southeastern Hawaiian Islands, a large number of existing Japanese naval presence there. According to scientists, more than 50 World War II warship wrecks sunk at the bottom of Truk Lagoon. These shipwrecks contain large amounts of hazardous materials such as thousands of barrels of oil and chemicals and unexploded weapons. However, because of the coral and marine life at the bottom of the lagoon, it became a haven for deep sea divers. Unfortunately, many divers go down and never come back up.
Recently, Russia's Pravda newspaper selected ten of the world's most mysterious and terrifying places, history museums with the dead, mysterious magic markets, eerie "ghost swamps", filled with the stench of the catacombs, and ghosts wandering around the mansion, so people can not help but spine chilling!
3. Magic Market in Sonora, Mexico: There is a magic market in Sonora, where a large number of witches gather. The witches sit in their little stores and claim that for 10 dollars they can eliminate the poverty and suffering of those who come. This market is very popular, and the customers are both local Mexicans and foreign tourists who come here. Those who come here leave with something daunting, such as mystical banners, snake blood, and dried birds, as they believe these things bring good luck.
4. Easter Island, Chile: Easter Island, is known as the most mysterious place in the world. There are many world famous stone statues on this island. These large stone statues are facing the sky, as if praying for something. Surprisingly, no one knows who carved the statue except the statue itself, and even less knows how the 20-meter-high, 90-ton statue was completed. What is even stranger is that scientists have used primitive stone tools left behind to carve the hard stone statue, only to have them shatter instead.
5. Manchac Swamp, Louisiana, U.S.A.: The swamp has an alias - "Ghost Swamp", located near New Orleans. Legend has it that the swamp was cursed by a voodoo queen, and three villagers mysteriously disappeared in the swamp in 1915.
6. The Catacombs of Paris, France: 178 kilometers of underground tunnels, buried about 7 million people, the skeletons are neatly arranged along the walls, and marked with the year of death. The air in the crypt is very dry and filled with the smell of decaying bodies. The crypt was originally a limestone quarry, but burials began in the 1870s due to overcrowding and disease outbreaks.
7. Winchester Mystery House, California: San Jose, California is home to the Winchester Mystery House, which has always been a strange place to visit. 1884, a widow named Sarah Winchester began building an opulent mansion. For reasons unknown, the mansion was not completed until after Sarah's death, which took 38 years. After its completion, the mansion was known as the Winchester Mystery House because of the unexplained and strange happenings. The mansion had 160 rooms with modern heating systems, drainage, gas lighting, 3 lifts and 47 fireplaces. There were also windows embedded in the floor and stairs leading nowhere; a door opened to nothing but a blank wall. There are rumors that Sarah and other tortured souls still roam these rooms.
8. Marigold Street, Edinburgh, Scotland: This narrow cobbled street was completely blocked off when the plague spread to Edinburgh in 1645. Legend has it that some families infected with the plague had their doors bricked shut and these people were starved to death. 2003 saw the re-opening of this little street as a tourist attraction. No one wants to live there because it is rumored to be haunted, and it seems a bit deserted. Tourists who come to visit the area say that they always feel their arms and legs touching something when they walk down the street. Locals claim that it could be the ghost of a girl named Annie.
9. Dilama Abi, Sicily: Aleister Crowley was probably the single most infamous magician in the world, and in 1920 was considered the most evil man on earth. Crowley once claimed that Hitler stole the secret of the swastika from him. Dilama Abbey was Crowley's private home and is covered in eerie murals in shades of gray. Rumor has it that Crowley built the house to enjoy free and easy sex. Crowley's admirer, filmmaker Kenneth Angell, shot a documentary on Crowley's house, but the film mysteriously disappeared. The house now lies in ruins.
10. Ukraine's Chernobyl: In 1986, Pripyat, in the Kiev region of Ukraine, suffered the worst nuclear power plant leak in history. Hundreds of thousands of residents were forced to evacuate, resulting in a no-man's land within 19 miles of the city. Today the abandoned Chernobyl has been developed as a tourist attraction. Visitors can see toys scattered in abandoned gardens and newspapers on dining tables.