13 CREEPIEST Places on Earth
By DJ Booth
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Have you ever wanted to visit The World’s Largest Grave or cast a voodoo spell on those who’ve wronged you? Here’s 13 CREEPIEST Places on Earth. Scary! Creepypasta!
1. Catacombs of Paris, The World’s Largest Grave
Let’s go see millions of dead bodies!In the 18 and 19 hundreds, cemeteries in Paris were bursting at the brim. There were so many dead people in the ground that decaying bodies contaminated the countries water supply.
To solve this creepy problem, they decided to use the dead’s skeletons as building materials for catacombs and dungeons. The walls are literally made from bones from 6 million bodies.
It’s known as The World’s Largest Grave but apparently, what they let the tourists see is only the PG version.
There’s an area closed to tourists that extends for miles beneath Paris with tunnels in complete darkness and creepy skeletons waiting to jump out of the walls.
2. Maunsell Sea Forts, the Silent Guardians
To help defend the Empire during the Second World War, the Maunsell Forts were built in the Thames and Mersey estuaries in the UK.They were operated as army and naval forts to protect against rebel forces but were decommissioned in the late 1950s.
There’s also forts designed for anti-aircraft defense that successfully shot down 22 aircraft and about 30 flying bombs.
The abandoned forts were used for pirate radio broadcasting in the 1960s and must have been host to the creepiest prank calls and cold hard cash giveaways.
3. The Door to Hell
In 1971, a bunch of rowdy Soviet geologists discovered an area in Turkmenistan that smelled like Satan just let one rip.The sulfur smelling stinker was only made worse when the Soviet’s tried to extract the pungent gas from the ground for use as a natural energy resource.
But the dark lord had a different idea and the drilling rig caused The ground beneath the camp to collapse into a huge chasm.
Amazingly, no-one was hurt, however their nostrils were getting a beating with the stench of Satan’s rotten eggs escaping from the chasm.
So what’s the best way to get rid of a big stink? My grandma taught me to light a match to neutralise any toilet turkeys. And that’s just what the Soviet’s did, lighting Beelzebub’s booty burp on fire.
However, this pleased the devil greatly and the fire has raged on even 40 years later!
Yikes!
4. Aokigahara Forest
There is a tranquil, serene forest at base of Mount Fuji in Japan that is absent of nearly all life, including those of the people who visit!Aokigahara is also known as the Suicide Forest where authorities discover up to 100 hanged and self-mutilated corpses every year.
The high rate of suicide has led officials to place signs at the entry of the forest, in Japanese and English, urging suicidal visitors to seek help and not kill themselves.
5. The Kabayan Fire Mummy Caves
If you’re into Cave exploring or spelunking, maybe you’ll want to avoid visiting the mountain slopes of Kabayan in the Philippines where you might crack a skull falling over the Fire Mummies.The Fire Mummies get their name from the unique process of mummification, which puts the freshly dead corpse sitting over an open fire until the body has lost all it’s fluids.
If that’s not creepy enough, some of the mummies have been stolen and are probably sitting, brain dead, on someone’s couch right now watching reruns of Keeping up With the Kardashians.
Now that’s freaky!
6. Centralia, the Underground Furnace
In 1962, a group of miners decided to burn a large area of landfill. You know, to get rid of that pesky garbage that they had stuffed into abandoned mines.You know what’s usually found in mines? Coal. And what happens when you mix fire and coal?
Well, the sleepy town of Centralia soon found out and created a giant underground furnace that still burns to this day.
Eventually, the townsfolk were evacuated and Centralia was left to burn.
7. Hellingly Hospital
For almost a century, Hellingly Hospital was the place where the medically insane were taken to be lobotomized and electrocuted.The hospital was finally closed in 1994 but remained open to insane vandals and urban explorers who are crazy enough to break in and walk the halls of the lunatic fringe.
8. Lome’s Voodoo Market
The city of Lome in Togo is a tropical paradise with a seedy underbelly.The locals like to gather at the largest fetish market in the world, a place where Voodoo practitioners can find anything they need for their rituals.
Voodoo healers use animal parts and strange talismans can invoke spirits to heal the sick and cast sickness on the healthy.
If piles of heads, tails, skins and limbs of various animals doesnt creep you out, then maybe the jars of blood and guts will.
9. The Overtoun Bridge
Donna Cooper, her husband and son were walking their dog Ben across a century-old granite Overtoun Bridge in Milton, Scotland.Without warning, Ben the dog leapt over a parapet on the bridge and fell 50 feet to his death on the rocks below.
In a separate incident Kenneth Meikle watched in horror as his golden retriever, Hendrix, leapt from the same bridge at virtually the same location.
In fact, this is not merely coincidence and over 50 dogs have suddenly leapt to their deaths from the same bridge at the exact same spot.
There have been rumors that the bridge is haunted and In 1994, local man Kevin Moy threw his baby son to his death from the bridge, claiming he thought the child was the anti-Christ, and later tried to commit suicide himself from the same bridge.
10. Isla de las Munecas or Island of the Dolls
Santana Barrera was a loner.He collected broken dolls from canals and rubbish tips around Mexico and then hung them from branches around his place of residence.
He also tied them to tree trunks in order to keep away evil spirits and appease the spirit of a dead girl he had found.
He believed that the dolls were somehow still “alive” and they’d walk around the island at night killing animals.
Sure. And then magically rehang themselves in the same spot every night. Good one Santana.
11. Hashima Island
Hashima island off the coast of Japan was populated from 1887 to 1974 as a coal mining facility before being completely abandoned.The island recently re-opened as a tourist attraction and Google went along to map the place.
The decaying buildings and complexes were once home to over 5000 people and recently featured in the 2012 James Bond film Skyfall.
Some people might get creeped out by crumbling buildings but I’d love to spend a day there. It’s beautiful, in a creepy sorta way.
12. The Body Farm
There is an outdoors research facility in Knoxville, Tennessee where you may just stumble upon a gruesome find. That of rotting dead bodies.Dr Bass, an anthropologist at the University of Tennessee setup what is known as The Body Farm to gain a better understanding of the decomposition process and frequently consulted with police in cases involving human remains.
Murder re-enactments and crime scenes are recreated using real body parts and used in the training of law enforcement officers to hone their skills and techniques.
13. Sedlec Ossuary
This small Roman Catholic chapel in the Czech Republic is The Sedlec Ossuary and is estimated to contain the skeletons of between 40,000 and 70,000 people, whose bones have been artistically arranged to form decorations and furnishings.It was the task of a half-blind monk in the 1500’s to furnish the The Church of Bones who exhumed skeletons from the surrounding cemeteries and stacked their bones inside the chapel.
An enormous chandelier of bones hangs from the center with a column of skulls draping the vault.
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