Discover 28 hauntingly creepy spots around the world where the atmosphere is so unsettling even spirits steer clear.
Underwater caves would be pretty high up on my list, if not right up at the very top of it!
Nutty Putty CaveShiraCheshire:I don’t understand that hobby.Going into a spacious proven safe cave that doesn’t fill with water at any point… yeah okay, not my cup of tea but I see how that’s exciting for people.But going into flooded/near flooded caves, going into caves you can easily get lost in, going into incredibly narrow caves you can easily get stuck in, going into caves that fill with water when the tide changes… why.
The Strid at Bolton AbbeyIt’s a river in England that looks almost quaint but is anything but.
The very true out back of Australia. If you’re traveling nobody expects to see you for up to a week, nobody expects phone calls or messages as theres no phone service. If you break down it could take a couple days until you are found by a passing car. And if they don’t find you in time the dry extreme heat will k**l you, you could never pack enough water to survive as long as it takes for someone to notice you’re even missing. It’s unforgiving and a horrible way to die. Not to mention that if you die the heat will decompose you in a matter of days and scavengers will scatter you meaning your family may never know.
Not really anything scary but kinda creepy so here goes. There’s a coal mining town in PA called Centralia. It’s unknown how exactly it happened but the mine caught fire in 1962 and the underground of the town has been on fire to this day. Basically a ghost town with a population of like 5 people. This town also apparently is the inspiration for the game silent Hill.
This is more eerie than scary, but towns that have been flooded to make a reservoir. The idea that there are people’s belongings and houses down there, at the bottom of the lake, preserved in the cold water.
F*****g Snake Island.Something crazy like 2 snakes per square metre lol.
Aside from the well known places such as various death camps, prisons and battlefields.F*****g Poveglia island. Throughout the history it was used as quarantine zone during the plague outbreaks, there are multiple mass graves on site, supposedly it was just a dying ground for the afflicted, where at some places the very soil was purely composed of rotting plague corpses. The fun doesn’t end there. Later on someone decided to build a mental asylum right on top of that, in 1922. Countless cases of observed hauntings by the patients, but nobody belived them, since they were supposedly crazy. The headmaster of the institute then later on commited s*****e by climbing the belltower and jumping down.
Haunted forest of Romania and in that forest: a circle where nothing grows. Anything from strange UFO sightings in there to a little girl went missing for 5 years and reappeared, when questioned, she couldn’t remember anything between the time she disappeared to the time she reappeared. Even creepier is the circle. A perfect circle where no plants grow and wildlife doesnt go into either. No explanation as to why things don’t grow and very strange myths and legends. Personally, I’m not someone to get wigged out on much, but everytime I think, hear or see pictures of this site, hair on the back on my neck stands up. Every time. I get weird vibes from that site just looking at itEdit: I’m not an expert on this forest. OP asked for scary places on earth known to man. I watched a documentary on this forest. I gave my opinion what I believe to be pretty creepy at least given the stories and such and the vibes I get when I see things related to the forest. So please stop trying to “discredit” my opinion on what I think is creepy for op. The forest is interesting, and the documentary discussed a lot. Again. I’m not an expert. Have a good day guys.
If you are afraid of dolls/mannequins The silent people(hiljainen kansa)-field in FinlandIts a field of mannequins facing the main road… and somebody goes and changes their clothes once in a whileIts really creepy in spring when the nights are still dark.
Kawah Ijen VolcanoConstantly spews sulfur in gas and liquid, lit up with bright blue flames, and has a lake of acid with pH down to 0.5.
Catacombs of Paris.Whackjob-KSP:I remember the article about some kids trespassing to explore those catacombs, and they found the body of a girl that had gone missing years earlier. Apparently another group of kids had gone down there, and in all the fun missed that they were sans one. Apparently, she had blundered around, in the dark and silence, before falling down and just dying there.
BoesmansgatIt barely looks like much more than a pond, yet is actually hundreds of metres deep and multiple people have died there.I read a couple of articles that, whilst fascinating, were also faintly terrifying.
Antarctica, with temperatures that can drop down to -89C, winds up to 300+km/h, thousands of Km from the closest inhabited nation, ultra low population density which the super majority are concentrated at various camps and just a place of ice. Get lost and you’re dead.
The North Korea/South Korea border.Less of creepiness, and more of direct danger that makes it so you will most likely die within seconds. More than likely there have been hundreds (possibly even thousands) of people that were shot or blown up in that area with their remains never retrieved.
Mayak nuclear facility in Russia, including the nearby Lake Karachay and the Techla River. Probably the most polluted place in the entire planet where there have been more nuclear accidents than I’d like to count and the authorities have been dumping nuclear waste into the lake for 50+ years, just converting it with concrete slowly. They’ve also been dumping water into the river for all that time too and it’s unknown how many people living downstream might have suffered from radiation and poisoning of their water/food supplies. Storage facilities for high level and low level waste are essentially rotting away and neglected or poorly operated, leading to repeated criticality events and explosions over its lifetime. This place has emitted more radiation into the environment than any other nuclear accident in history; including Chernobyl and Fukushima.
The blue burrito. In prison if you go on a hunger strike, or if you are a s*****e risk, they will wrap you up in this blue binding with your hands to your sides. Only your head poking out the top. And throw you in that tiny padded broom closet room.And leave you wrapped up like this 24 hours a day, for as long as they want. Theyll help you eat, and go to the bathroom, but otherwise you will be completely immobilized. That sounds worse than death.
The ocean, we know more about other planets than we do below the surface of the ocean. Their is an estimated 100 thousand to 10 million species that are undiscovered. “Point Nemo” also know as the loneliest place on earth is located in the ocean. The closest island is the Pitcairn which is still 2,700 KM (1,677 Miles) and inhabited by approximately 50 people. If you were at point nemo and the international space station were to pass over you, they would be the closest people to you. Not only is the ocean lonely and cold, it also has lots of pressure. If you were to be placed at the bottom of the Mariana Trench with no protection you would be crushed with the force of about 50 jumbo jets. Which is around 25,000,000 Pounds or 12,500 tons.
Hot Tub of DespairScientists have discovered a ‘lake’ in the Gulf of Mexico. Everyone, who enters this pool at the bottom of the sea will suffer horribly.The water in the ‘lake within the sea’ is about five times as salty as the water surrounding it. It also contains highly toxic concentrations of methane and hydrogen sulphide and can thus not mix with the surrounding sea.For animals (and people) who swim into it, these toxic concentrations can be deadly. Only bacterial life, tube worms, and shrimp can survive those circumstances.
Chernobyl is pretty scary.
The elephant’s foot at Chernobyl. I am pretty sure being in the same room as that thing is lethal.
School bathrooms. I’m dead serious about this.
Probably not the scariest on Earth, but to me as an Ohioan, the many dead and dying towns we have here can be pretty surreal. Places where manufacturing and mining jobs dried up, and most or all of the inhabitants just left. Many still have a few people living there, often 50 or less. In these places, it can feel like you’ve gone back in time. There are no chain stores of any kind, only old-timey mom and pop places. Maybe a general store, a bar/diner, a post office if they’re lucky, and that’s it. All of the vehicles are pristine 50s and 60s models, the farm equipment may be from the 1920s or earlier. 90% of the homes and businesses are abandoned, if not more. You may also hear an accent not spoken by anyone other than these few people. I’ve been to tiny towns here where everyone sounded like they’d been transplanted out of Boston to some middle of nowhere Ohio town. (Due to isolation, stuff like this can happen where an area has so little exposure to other areas that they retain an accent through generations that technically shouldn’t exist locally, it’s kind of like a type of Founder Effect. Look up Tangier Island, Virginia for a great example.)Visiting these places can be uncomfortable, because the few remaining residents are often downright hostile to outsiders.
Hoia Baciu forest in Romania is considered to be a haunted forest, some people went missing in that forest (the shepherd who went missing with a flock of 200 sheep). Visitors of this forest also report strange feelings of nausea, anxiety and being watched.
I live in India, so jungles, in which elephants and predators live, are pretty scary. Days are pretty cool, but after twilight its scary…
I visited a place on a tour of WW2 events around Europe that gave me absolute chills. It was in the middle of a woods, a big pit with steps cut into the side that we carefully walked down. It must’ve been about 20ft deep and 50ft from side to side, empty save for a single wooden post riddled with bullet holes. Horrible, but so were a lot of other places we’d been, but this one was weird. It was in the middle of a forest we’d walked through, full of birds and other wildlife, but here it was silent, completely still. No wind, no noise, nothing grew through the packed earth. It sounds stupid but it was like nature rejected it, it felt poisonous. As soon as we walked away from it all the sounds of nature started again. Freaked me out, that was 26 years ago and I’ve never forgotten how it made me feel.
In Hawaii, there’s a sinkhole who’s name escapes me. Nobody knows exactly how or why but sometimes, people who swim there are fine one moment before showing signs of panic and are subsequently pulled into the depths. No visible disturbances in the water are present in these cases and many times, people are fine. The locals believe a legendary water monster lives there and have therefore banned any and all swimming in this area. Most likely, it’s a tidal whirlpool but if this is the case, there would be visible water disturbance on or near the surface and the disappearances in a smaller area of the lake, however this is not the case from what I hear.
After watching the movie The Lighthouse I would be terrified of spending one day there. Just the idea of being in a small rock in the middle of nowhere with no communication and just one small accident from death terrifies me.
The Mariana Trench.GloDyna:Just read on it..1960 was the First Time Man Reached The Bottom. Took till 2013 to do it again.. sheesh..7 miles deep.. looked at a few creatures.. Goblin Shark? HAHA NOPE!
Consonno (Italy) is a ghost city, consonno was called “città dei balocchi” in old time because of the “life quality” about the city, after a landslide, the city started to become a ghost town. [here the link if you want to know more](http://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consonno)It’s not “haunted” or maybe it is, but the city now it’s really creepy without any people living on it.
Any school at night with the lights off. Something about places that are alive with people all day can be the creepiest when you experience them alone in the dark at night.Edit: I once got left in my old jr high building after a play. I had been playing hide and seek and s**t and when it was over my brother strait forgot to find me to go home. That stage, the auditorium, the curtains, back rooms with costumes. All that s**t in the pitch dark and silence was f*****g wild!
People have limited answers to places we can at least send a probe. I’m not going to.I’m nominating the molten core of the planet. Temperatures hot enough to turn liquid metal into gas, but pressures too high to allow even that so it remains liquid.
Black Mountain in AustraliaStories have persisted for years of people disappearing into the interior of the mountain … and never coming out. Even the Aborigines shun it.
As an Aussie, I have to say our fire zones.
The Island of the Dolls in MexicoWaverly Hills Sanatorium in Kentucky, USA.
Annapurna. A mountain in Nepal where nearly 30 percent of climbers die.
The scariest places are the nearby slums, crack-house and h****n-infested areas. Nearly every major city has one or more. Latin America may have the worst ones but it’s hard to tell. If you go there and don’t know your way around, you are going to get robbed or worse. And if you don’t do your research first, it’s easy to find yourself in these areas without knowing. All the physical places are known and easy enough to avoid – Snake Island doesn’t move.
There is an island in Brazil, the island has 1500m length x 500m width. It has at least 45 snakes per hectare. How scary is that?