@krmeadows0001 bottom of the ocean is a place therefor the statement is correct that not everything has been explored. (unfortunately it also means not everything has been mapped)
Flat earthers don't think we live on a disc. Could be an infinite plane with more world ponds beyond the known world. Don't strawman the position clown.
Videos like this remind me that the world is so much bigger than I think. The fact that these areas can be almost completely unreachable despite our technological advancements, and the fact that you have visited beautiful places like these without seeing a single tourist anywhere in sight, so incredible. This was not a concept i thought we’d ever see a sequel video for. So fricken rad
This, after you've considered the amount of land that is unreachable. Expand that to the amount that is under water. Everyone wants to go to space when we haven't even explored the globe.
It gives me immense joy that there are still places on earth just as magnificent as our major monuments, but untouched and tucked away for humanity's future.
Sorry to say I've been to the Australian ones. If you want to experience the Horizontal Falls you had better hurry as they are being closed to tourists within the next couple of years.
I don't understand what compels anybody, nonetheless somebody who has an an animal with them, to do ANYTHING but sit down 10+ feet from the edge and fly the drone that way...
Google Earth and Google Streets are one of the most amazing sites on the internet. You can learn about locations, but more importantly you can see how people live and how we are so much alike. Thank you for this video.
Arnhem Land is intense. Had a friend almost die there because he got stranded for 5 days on the MAIN road. Parts of Western Australia are still so unexplored that you can find gold on top of the ground.
Most people up here in the Northern Hemisphere don't even have a good grasp on just how big Australia is, and how unpopulated over most of it. It's as wide as the contiguous USA with only 10% of the US's population!
Dude please never change your delivery on how you talk. I feel like I’m on a carnival ride where the dead inside host is talking about backstories to half broken animatronics, it’s something right out of a movie. 😂 I love it man, very relaxing.
@@SpaceDad42no too many incorrect pronunciations of actual words and too many correct pronunciations of proper nouns. Even an AI can fcking pronounce the word taiga.
7:52 okay, this canyon is blowing my mind. I can’t believe I lived so close to a place so truly alien and majestic. Why arent people exploring it? It seems like a place ripe for old fashioned expeditions. I would go in a heartbeat.
@@DumbAsh00 cooler maybe but I went to the grand canyon at 3 am on a moonless night. Wow. I found myself inside of a galaxy. I always wondered why people were so sure we were in one until that day.
Not often do I feel a real connection to RUclips videos. But this one reignited my desire to get out and explore my local area and country. Thanks for that.
I live not far from the Owyhee Canyonlands and would confirm that it would take a lifetime to explore. Where Idaho, Nevada & Oregon come together could be called the "Outback" of the west.
@@hamaljaylol no I live in the badlands area, that’s Montana & the Dakotas & Wyoming. The red rocks are found throughout the west. So I totally get why people mix that up, the areas are close, but the American Badlands are on the east side of the Rockies. Come visit!
I’m SO glad I just found your channel . To tell you the truth i was almost expecting clickbait but this is a wonderfully done series that shows our world really isn’t as discovered as we think, beautiful work man
As an Oregonian, I am absolutely thrilled that the Owyhee canyonlands made this list. I have explored virtually every corner of this beautiful state, including nearby Steens mountain, Hart mountain and the Alvord desert, but I have not yet been to the Owyhee. It has long been on my list of places to travel to. And this area is also full of petroglyphs. In fact, Hart mountain has a spot called Petroglyph Lake with ancient petroglyphs all around. I have never seen anything like it! And to think, Oregon has places that are mentioned in the same category as some of these remote and mysterious areas of legends and lore throughout the world! These kinds of locations have always fascinated me.
I've dreamed of moving out there my whole life, but I have no idea what industries even exist to make a living when everything is so expensive there...
As a resident of the neighbouring town in #2, I was stoked to see the Nahanni National Park on here. Even though it’s close, I’ve never gone, most people haven’t, unless they are avid paddlers or wealthy hunters from the south/States. The Northwest Territories are a marvel, but high cost of living/airfare makes it tough to explore. As a local you could take a direct roundtrip flight to a resort in Cancun for a week for less money than an off-site camping/paddle trip in the Nahanni.
The first one looks like something straight out of Kenshi. I think what's most fascinating about it is that, at least from some theories I've heard, the Sahara actually used to be much less arid than it currently is, more akin to a scrubland or semi-desert like you'd find in the American southwest and northern Mexico. Interesting to imagine life in a time so far back that the very land itself is unrecognisable to its current form, leaving behind signs of long-gone life in a now inhospitable ocean of sand.
Wow. That was brilliant! I’m sat here in the gentle countryside of West Sussex in southern England and dreaming of remote destinations in the Sahara and the mountain that spoke to Genghis Khan. Those unexplored canyons and pristine landscapes with no roads. Vast unexplored wildernesses full of the ghosts of ancient civilisations. How lucky we are to live on this magical planet. I so hope you get to go to some of these places and take us with you.
I have been exploring the Owyhees for many years. The absolute best part about it is that I have NEVER, not once, come across another person out there once I get south beyond the Owyhee Mountains. It's simply too massive and too remote to just run into someone by chance. In the summer you better have a ton of water and a GPS. Always try to have two forms of transportation with you, like a motorcycle or ATV in the back of a pickup (or even just a bike) so if you break down you're not screwed. This area is seriously unforgiving--HOT in the summer with rattlesnakes being pretty common, and frigid in the winter (elevation is anywhere from 4,000 to 6,000 ft) with snow and muddy clay, creating a real nightmare especially when it gets dark at 5 pm in December/January. But every time I get back from a weekend out there, I feel like I have cheated death once again...and THAT feels incredible! 😃 I'm happy to share additional tips and incredible areas I've explored in the Owyhees if anyone is interested, especially if you enjoy collecting bizarre rocks and gemstones, concretions, fossils, petrified wood, geodes, etc.
believe it or not, one of the best most detailed accounts is the OT in the bible.... it ties in mentions a lot of early civilizations' and their culture, kings, religions that archaeologists have used to guide expeditions for centuries now .... even the New Testament, especially Luke charting Paul's journeys in Acts.. right at our finger tips.
I, too, have spent tons of time looking at Chad. It really speaks to me with how much crater activity is going on. I feel like cataclysm happened there for a substantial amount of time. It would be fascinating to spend years traveling and exploring and learning about the area.
Amazing! I had the pleasure to run through number 1 btw - door to door, the journey from Paris took us about 72 hours of countinuous travel. We stayed in the middle of the region for about 5 days, running about 50 km per day and getting back to the camp to sleep. Number 2 and 5 out of your lists are the one I will keep in mind for future expeditions!
I love the fact that there are still isolated, desolate places on Earth... I'm fascinated by places where there is still thousands of miles of wilderness
Those towering canyons in Canada. Almost unbelievable. So tall, so deep. Even in Nevada. There are places in our backyards that so totally awesome. Cannot almost not believe what is on our continent. Almost cannot describe these thundering areas. Thankyou for showing these places.
Chad’s Volcanology has always been frustrating to find info on. The circular structures near tousside are calderas but there’s very little ability to study them because of the civil unrest
Wow there are some truly insane places Id never heard about until now, really great video and the small detail of you pronouncing Genghis Khan correctly was a breath of fresh air as well haha
Every time I watch a video from this channel, I imagine I get the same feeling of excitement and curiosity that kids hundreds of years ago would feel when explorers would tell their tales of vast new lands.
I thought that I knew about the American West pretty well, but I have to admit that I never heard of the Owyhee Canyon system till now. For that alone I am so grateful to what you do on this channel! The feeling of isolation and remoteness must be overwhelming in such a place..
I desperately want to go fishing northwest of Yellowknife. Vast expanses of glacier ponds that melt in the summer, full of pike bass and trout that have never seen a human. Enormous rivers filled with king salmon the size of an average person. Ancient sturgeon that are a hundred years old.
I used to hunt California big horn in the Owyhee canyons, I left the road and drove 4 hours to little jacks creek canyon and hunted the surrounding canyons. It’s not impossible to get there but not easy either. Those 1000ft canyon walls are loose shale and climbing is also possible since I once had to pack out a Ram that fell to the bottom when it was shot. Since then it became a bombing range for the Air Force so access is now illegal.
I was an absolute Google Earth freak until I started losing eyesight. Now it is extremely difficult to simply cruise aroud and look at things here and there (as opposed to having a specific location to go to). I miss it terribly, in fact was a GE Community moderator for about 7 years and loved it. Well, I really enjoyed this post and will check them out on GE! By the way - I live in Oregon and have never heard of those astounding canyons! I do find severe eastern Oregon more interesting to look at than the lush green west - except for the coast.
POV hi from Alberta, Canada great unique channel man. Even better list I'm hoping you are able to secure safe access to as many of the top 10's as possible. Looking forward to more.
2:29 The 'H' is silent. arn-nem. The first 'a' in Kakadu sounds the same as the second 'a' in "banana" when spoken by an American. The second 'a' sounds like the second 'a' in "banana" when spoken by an Australian. Ka-kah-doo
14:00 In your number one location there is a couple of big meteorite craters like the Aorounga and the Gweni-Fada impact craters, I thought you were going to speak about them but didn´t xD Great video and what an amazing places, can´t imagine the drone videos you could get from those. Thank you for sharing your adventures, best chill explore channel out there.
Just wild. I had no idea, have never seen any of these locations featured anywhere. Amazing, rare finds. Thanks for sharing this great video adventure!
these so hard to reach places have not seen any gopro travellers yet, imagine the charging up these things...solar panels maybe? i say almost impossible to do on your own.
@@wout123100 Absolutely, would take some sponsorship. Maybe the ones with petroglyphs would be easier to get those types of funds for, not sure. But oh wow. What amazing landscapes! Just... stunning. Otherworldly.
@@rynneivarsson751Many could most certainly be fuunded by geological scientific sponsors. The one in Siberia comes to mind. If there's one thing geologists are good at, it is at finding excuses and money to go really REALLY far away to see some rocks.
Excellent video, the earth is a wonderful and beautiful place. It is interesting that there are place that could scare the crap out of you being that they are so unknown. I imagine the explorers going West here in the US saw wonders that they could not have imagined.
Really loved the presentation of this video No music, or overly sensational voice acting The silence and map zoomout of these places places paint an incredible mystery, places that civilization will probably never easily access to or unveil its secrets
Thank you… that was the craziest mispronunciation ive seen in a minute. I don’t understand how RUclipsrs mispronounce so many words and place names. You obviously have a computer… check how to pronounce things you are unsure about. It can be really annoying and jarring to people…
While we've mapped the world, the idea that there are still unexplored corners of the Earth is awe-inspiring. It's reassuring to know that some places remain beyond human reach.
incredible. inspiring. since i was young i always wanted to explore new frontiers of earth that haven’t been visited by humans for thousands of years. now im in college and working towards making that my life’s work.
Amazing Nolan! All places that I have never seen before, not even heard of. Owahee Canyons just blew me away. The scale is scarry. Thanks so much and 🎄 Happy, peacful Holidays 🎄 Stay safe and healthy, from 🇩🇪
Here are the locations: * The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad * Nahanni National Park, Canada * Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia * The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen * The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States * The Infinity Portal in California * Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia * Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia * Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada * Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria
* 0:45 - Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria * 1:47 - Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada * 2:55 - Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia * 4:10 - Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia * 5:15 - The Infinity Portal in California * 6:05 - The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States * 7:37 - The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen * 8:20 - Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia * 9:45 - Nahanni National Park, Canada * 12:20 - The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad * 15:10 - Tibesti Mountains, Chad With timestamps, I used Gemini 2.
Bonus: Traveling to all those places would be very expensive. Here is a breakdown of the estimated cost of travel to each place: * The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad: $5,000 - $10,000. This is a very remote and difficult to access location. You would likely need to hire a guide and a 4x4 vehicle, which would be expensive. * Nahanni National Park, Canada: $3,000 - $5,000. This park is also remote and requires a float plane to access. * Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia: $2,000 - $4,000. This area is also remote, but there are some tour operators that offer trips to the mountain. * The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen: $5,000 - $10,000. Yemen is currently in a state of civil war, so it is very dangerous and expensive to travel there. * The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States: $1,000 - $2,000. This area is relatively easy to access, but you would need to rent a car. * The Infinity Portal in California: $500 - $1,000. This is a relatively easy to access location, but you would need to rent a car. * Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia: $3,000 - $5,000. This is a very remote location that is difficult to access. * Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia: $2,000 - $4,000. This area is remote and requires a permit to visit. * Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada: $5,000 - $10,000. This is a very remote and difficult to access location. * Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria: $1,000 - $2,000. This area is relatively easy to access, but you would need to hire a car and driver. The total cost of travel to all these places would be between $25,500 and $46,000. This is a very rough estimate, and the actual cost could be higher or lower depending on your travel style and how much time you spend in each location.
So many impossible to reach locations, mind blowing geographically alone, and then you find out there are ancient artworks and remnants of lost civilizations there too. It’s humbling.
my personal favourite is the shunak crater in kazakhstan. it has a mere handful of photos on google, and i'm surprised it has any. its location is extremely remote, the closest 'highway' (a paved road) is +100km away, and the closest city is ~200km away. the only way to get to the crater is to either: 1. get off the karaganda - almaty highway to a land access road going to a military base (illegal) ~150km away from the highway. at the base, turn to the crater 'road' and drive at least 40km with nothing but you, the steppe, and the sketchiest land access road ever. 2. try to catch a flight to balqash, and drive on mostly unpaved roads for 150km to reach moyinty (мойынты), a small village with no hotels or places to stay. from moyinty, drive another 50km on a land access road that is only ever used by i'd say about 5 cars per year, with no settlement nearby. one of the methods includes a crime, and both are extremely dangerous due to the lack of cell service and human population on either of the ways, as well as everchanging steppe conditions and extreme weather. i would never even attempt this, even with experience, as no amount of it would constitute going to shunak.
Thanks for sharing, that crater looks amazing... and the landscape around it, wow. Moynty looks like it'd be just as interesting to visit as well, I wonder what it's like to live there. I wonder what that collection of boxes is to the NW of Moynty? I thought graveyard but not sure. It looks like they use train to get their stuff in and out, but this could also be a way to reach Moynty.
7:36 That has to be the Bruneau Canyon. I worked on an Air Force bombing range in that area, and visited the canyon quite a few times. Really neat area.
"the fact that we don't know the origin of it points towards it being a logistical nightmare to get there" never change man, also this is the reason why we haven't explored the Oceans, it's easier logistically to make it to space
When I was younger, I used to “just go” to a new place that I heard about. I had a rule against owning anything that I could not carry on foot alone, or too valuable to leave. I saw the whole of the USA before I was 18. I hitched rides, and sometimes took buses, and stayed wherever I could find work, or would live on my savings for short periods without work. The eighties were a different universe!
@ if you want to have an effect on the world and the future, become a teacher. You don’t have to do anything but care for, love, and be a good example of a decent person, and never lie to them. Teachers have more to do with raising children than parents do, too often. I have endeavored to speak life to the young people in my life. Sometimes just acknowledging kids can make a difference to them. The “little things” in life add up!
Thanks for an enlightening video, almost completely free of silly claims about “spirits”. It took me to places I’ve never heard of and could not imagine existed. Well done!
I don't buy the idea of something staying "unexplored forever". Except obviously for human-restricted areas like for the military. (Which btw is disgusting that they take up historically interesting areas like the Volcanic canyon for their warmongering purposes) With the advancement of technology, specifically AI and robotics, we'll eventually be able to acquire footage and samples from anywhere on the planet even if humans can't physically go there.
Thanks for mentioning Mongolia here. Burkhan Khaldun is not hard to reach its close from small village and there are natives still living inside the protected area. During winter its very easy to get I went there 3 times already. Landscape is impressive enough to attract me every single year! Thanks for the intresting video
"Jengis" / "Chingis" is the correct pronunciation. Some English dude decided to transliterate Mongolian into english using a G to make the J sound, like the word Giraffe. Everyone forgot it was supposed to be a J, not a hard G, and we ended up saying Gengis and not Jengis. In modern Mongolian latin-script spelling, his name is said Chingis. But Jengis is close enough as CH and J are effectively the same sound in many languages (including Mongolian)
That canyon is insane really, my dog would walk straight over the edge though... Also I'm in tears about ppl correcting your pronunciation of Genghis Khan when it's actually correct 😭
the green sahara period likely hides some of the most incredible archaeological and palaeontological artifacts/ sites left undiscovered. Imagine finding the remains of villages or settlements along long vanished rivers, evidence of trade with other cultures, unique artwork and history largely absent from current understanding. Not earth shattering, but the scope of what is just inaccessible in war torn and sparsely populated parts of the Sahara is incredible to me.
Everything may have been mapped but not everything has been explored, its nice to know there's still places on this earth that no one has ever been
No guarantee that everything has even been mapped.
@@JamesHawkeRUclipsflat earthers still need to map the underside of the disc 😂
How could you know if no one has ever been there if they didn't leave a trace behind? How do you prove a negative?
@krmeadows0001 bottom of the ocean is a place therefor the statement is correct that not everything has been explored. (unfortunately it also means not everything has been mapped)
Flat earthers don't think we live on a disc. Could be an infinite plane with more world ponds beyond the known world. Don't strawman the position clown.
Videos like this remind me that the world is so much bigger than I think. The fact that these areas can be almost completely unreachable despite our technological advancements, and the fact that you have visited beautiful places like these without seeing a single tourist anywhere in sight, so incredible. This was not a concept i thought we’d ever see a sequel video for. So fricken rad
This, after you've considered the amount of land that is unreachable. Expand that to the amount that is under water.
Everyone wants to go to space when we haven't even explored the globe.
6:34 who wants to bet theres a swastika somewere in thos ancient glyphs its been found in many other ancient parts of the world too.
@@XXPYR0XX Swatstika had a different meaning before the nazis took it and used it as their own symbol.
Now that they have RUclips videos the tourists will flock in
@@glandhound Your "space" and "globe" are nothing more tan lies, but you go ahead and keep them alive, shill.
It gives me immense joy that there are still places on earth just as magnificent as our major monuments, but untouched and tucked away for humanity's future.
Don't worry. Now that this video revealed the locations there will be a Starbucks at each location within the week.
I believe we have more and more places on this earth we still didn't discover
Sorry to say I've been to the Australian ones. If you want to experience the Horizontal Falls you had better hurry as they are being closed to tourists within the next couple of years.
7:43 You were really risking your life standing on that cracked cliff there my guy 😂
Not just standing there but flying a fuckin drone while doing so. That would throw off my balance so much
I don't understand what compels anybody, nonetheless somebody who has an an animal with them, to do ANYTHING but sit down 10+ feet from the edge and fly the drone that way...
I noticed that too. That rock he was standing on could have broken off at any moment.
@@jeffcoil6181 that would have been a great shot from the drone... As long as the dog didn't fall.
He didn't. He stole footage from another creator.
0:00 - Introduction
0:45 - 10 - Casar Dra, Northern Algeria
1:32 - 9 - Astronaut Canyon, Devon Island, Canada
2:26 - 8 - West Arnhem Land, Northern Territories, Australia
3:44 - Bonus - Buccaneer Archipelago, Western Australia, Australia
4:11 - 7- Patomsky Crater, Siberia, Russia
5:46 - 6 - Infinity Portal, California, USA
6:44 - 5 - Depths of the Owyhee Canyon, USA
8:56 - 4 - Barhout Pit, Yemen
9:59 - 3 - Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Mongolia
11:30 - 2 - Nahanni National Park, Canada
13:40 - 1 - Ennedi Plateau, Chad
17:01 - Bonus - Tibesti Mountains, Chad
18:00 - Conclusion
Each of them fairly well documented and not that hard to reach in reality, considering most of them are very close to inhabited places.
@@57thorns Maybe easy to reach, but hard to explore. The vastness of those canyons amaze me
@@57thornsLOL!!!
A number of el sites spell #10 as "Ksar Draa".
What a chad
Google Earth and Google Streets are one of the most amazing sites on the internet. You can learn about locations, but more importantly you can see how people live and how we are so much alike. Thank you for this video.
literally one of the greatest bit of tech humans have access to. put this in the hands of man 100 years ago lol
@@b_mo537 Amen!
alike?? lol
@__-bz7wh Indians are humans who eat and drink just like you, so that's one thing alike
Browsing the world's restaurants while hungry is a great passtime.
Please review the pronunciation of "archipelago."
Archy Pelligoe
@@the_pov_channel Arkipelago is how it's pronounced 🙂
And Genghis Khan lol
I was wondering if that was a troll he was doing lmao.
Italian here. Ehy you guys cant pronunce italian words?
23°08'57"N 41°19'50"E - Seven Volcanoes in a 10km straight line.
neat! shows us how the plates move and how a rift far below spews up matter in exactly the same spot
@Telebog_Productions scam
this place is amazing!! thank you for sharing
Yes, this is how we know that the plates move around and the hotspots of the mantle don't.
Can you give me a list of more coordinates of places like this!, i really like this topic
Arnhem Land is intense. Had a friend almost die there because he got stranded for 5 days on the MAIN road.
Parts of Western Australia are still so unexplored that you can find gold on top of the ground.
Most people up here in the Northern Hemisphere don't even have a good grasp on just how big Australia is, and how unpopulated over most of it. It's as wide as the contiguous USA with only 10% of the US's population!
@@t.c.bramblett617yet just as racist if not more against Chinese people
Maybe some of you Aussies could tell me - what do I do when my boomerang won’t come back? 🙃
@@HooDatDonDarit will come back the moment you least expect it. Enjoy living in constant fear until then.
@@t.c.bramblett617yea i am always amazed about the size of australia. wish i could explore the unexplored areas.
Dude please never change your delivery on how you talk. I feel like I’m on a carnival ride where the dead inside host is talking about backstories to half broken animatronics, it’s something right out of a movie. 😂 I love it man, very relaxing.
Ai
@@SpaceDad42no too many incorrect pronunciations of actual words and too many correct pronunciations of proper nouns. Even an AI can fcking pronounce the word taiga.
Monotone delivery does not automatically equal ai…
@ right? Idk why someone would choose his specific voice. It’s very distinct, while possible I feel like this guy is legit.
Yeah this guy is not ai! I also love the way he talks, makes my head calm before I go to bed.
7:52 okay, this canyon is blowing my mind. I can’t believe I lived so close to a place so truly alien and majestic. Why arent people exploring it? It seems like a place ripe for old fashioned expeditions. I would go in a heartbeat.
these cost money you know..a lot.
People like Randall Carlson do tours of America showing off the remnants of a massive flood that scoured our landscape from coast to coast
Honestly cooler than the grand canyon tbh
@@Momo-xs8moidk about a massive flood coast to coast... Are you talking about the western interior seaway???
@@DumbAsh00 cooler maybe but I went to the grand canyon at 3 am on a moonless night. Wow. I found myself inside of a galaxy. I always wondered why people were so sure we were in one until that day.
Not often do I feel a real connection to RUclips videos. But this one reignited my desire to get out and explore my local area and country. Thanks for that.
I live not far from the Owyhee Canyonlands and would confirm that it would take a lifetime to explore. Where Idaho, Nevada & Oregon come together could be called the "Outback" of the west.
They call that area the Badlands.
I found this to be the most intriguing of all these sites! I had never even heard about these canyons! They are majestic
I need to build a house there.
@@hamaljaylol no I live in the badlands area, that’s Montana & the Dakotas & Wyoming. The red rocks are found throughout the west. So I totally get why people mix that up, the areas are close, but the American Badlands are on the east side of the Rockies. Come visit!
@@Twobarpsithe fire risk is very intense
10:21 J Angus Khan ?
that’s how his name is actually pronounced
Bruh..😂😂
@tacksyt it's supposed to be pronounced jenghis khan
That is indeed the correct pronunciation.
@ can you pronounce my name correctly?
I’m SO glad I just found your channel . To tell you the truth i was almost expecting clickbait but this is a wonderfully done series that shows our world really isn’t as discovered as we think, beautiful work man
As an Oregonian, I am absolutely thrilled that the Owyhee canyonlands made this list. I have explored virtually every corner of this beautiful state, including nearby Steens mountain, Hart mountain and the Alvord desert, but I have not yet been to the Owyhee. It has long been on my list of places to travel to. And this area is also full of petroglyphs. In fact, Hart mountain has a spot called Petroglyph Lake with ancient petroglyphs all around. I have never seen anything like it! And to think, Oregon has places that are mentioned in the same category as some of these remote and mysterious areas of legends and lore throughout the world! These kinds of locations have always fascinated me.
Loved his pronunciation of Kakadu
I've dreamed of moving out there my whole life, but I have no idea what industries even exist to make a living when everything is so expensive there...
As a resident of the neighbouring town in #2, I was stoked to see the Nahanni National Park on here. Even though it’s close, I’ve never gone, most people haven’t, unless they are avid paddlers or wealthy hunters from the south/States. The Northwest Territories are a marvel, but high cost of living/airfare makes it tough to explore. As a local you could take a direct roundtrip flight to a resort in Cancun for a week for less money than an off-site camping/paddle trip in the Nahanni.
My father went to the, Nahanni, twenty years ago. And, yes, it was a five-figure trip.
That's just amazing!
Which neighboring town is this?
My mouth dropped wide open at the 7:31 mark, and after pausing it I am still looking at it 10 mins later.
7:54 is what got me. That place looks straight out of a fantasy illustration!
Phenominal place!!!!
The video gamer in me was waiting for the dog to bump into him, causing him to fall into the canyon.
did you find it?
Same, absolutly flabbergasted ...
The way you obsess over canyons, is how I feel about valley floors leading up to massive mountain ranges. Love it brother!
The first one looks like something straight out of Kenshi. I think what's most fascinating about it is that, at least from some theories I've heard, the Sahara actually used to be much less arid than it currently is, more akin to a scrubland or semi-desert like you'd find in the American southwest and northern Mexico. Interesting to imagine life in a time so far back that the very land itself is unrecognisable to its current form, leaving behind signs of long-gone life in a now inhospitable ocean of sand.
Wow. That was brilliant! I’m sat here in the gentle countryside of West Sussex in southern England and dreaming of remote destinations in the Sahara and the mountain that spoke to Genghis Khan. Those unexplored canyons and pristine landscapes with no roads. Vast unexplored wildernesses full of the ghosts of ancient civilisations. How lucky we are to live on this magical planet. I so hope you get to go to some of these places and take us with you.
I wanna go to all these places...
SAME
yooo i fall asleep to your videos
@@orphansoup That's ... such a odd curveball of a compliment ngl xD
and you can. :D But ony one ... and once.
I think I'd rather just sit here and watch a video about them 🤔
Some of them are a _really_ long way away 🤷♂
The reach of Google Earth is astounding! Sometimes a little creepy...
It’s like the all-seeing eye of Sauron
you can do some pretty incredible things by taping a camera to a rocket
oh wow, turns out exploration is still very possible in this planet! that is so refreshing to hear
I have been exploring the Owyhees for many years. The absolute best part about it is that I have NEVER, not once, come across another person out there once I get south beyond the Owyhee Mountains. It's simply too massive and too remote to just run into someone by chance.
In the summer you better have a ton of water and a GPS. Always try to have two forms of transportation with you, like a motorcycle or ATV in the back of a pickup (or even just a bike) so if you break down you're not screwed.
This area is seriously unforgiving--HOT in the summer with rattlesnakes being pretty common, and frigid in the winter (elevation is anywhere from 4,000 to 6,000 ft) with snow and muddy clay, creating a real nightmare especially when it gets dark at 5 pm in December/January. But every time I get back from a weekend out there, I feel like I have cheated death once again...and THAT feels incredible! 😃
I'm happy to share additional tips and incredible areas I've explored in the Owyhees if anyone is interested, especially if you enjoy collecting bizarre rocks and gemstones, concretions, fossils, petrified wood, geodes, etc.
Human prehistory is worth more attention.
so what? climate change is worth more attention, doesnt mean everyone should get involved in trying to fix it
@@Philip-qq7ql what the heck are you so pressed about this comment for?
believe it or not, one of the best most detailed accounts is the OT in the bible.... it ties in mentions a lot of early civilizations' and their culture, kings, religions that archaeologists have used to guide expeditions for centuries now .... even the New Testament, especially Luke charting Paul's journeys in Acts.. right at our finger tips.
Absolutely, and this video goes to show how interesting prehistory really is without resorting to ancient aliens conspiracy theory bs.
@@justinanderson4809fr bud got offended 😭
I, too, have spent tons of time looking at Chad. It really speaks to me with how much crater activity is going on. I feel like cataclysm happened there for a substantial amount of time. It would be fascinating to spend years traveling and exploring and learning about the area.
Who is Archie Pelago ?? 😂😂
I thought the same thing as well 😂😂😂😂
@thePOVchannel aar-kuh-peh-luh-gow
Who is Archie Pelago?
And why is he at many locations at once?
one of Jhengis Khan's good buddies
Ai channel
Amazing! I had the pleasure to run through number 1 btw - door to door, the journey from Paris took us about 72 hours of countinuous travel. We stayed in the middle of the region for about 5 days, running about 50 km per day and getting back to the camp to sleep. Number 2 and 5 out of your lists are the one I will keep in mind for future expeditions!
I love the fact that there are still isolated, desolate places on Earth... I'm fascinated by places where there is still thousands of miles of wilderness
Those towering canyons in Canada. Almost unbelievable. So tall, so deep. Even in Nevada. There are places in our backyards that so totally awesome. Cannot almost not believe what is on our continent. Almost cannot describe these thundering areas. Thankyou for showing these places.
Wow What a world we live in! And most of us have no idea, me included.
I didn't expect places just in the middle of the US. Crazy footage from Owyhee.
Chad’s Volcanology has always been frustrating to find info on. The circular structures near tousside are calderas but there’s very little ability to study them because of the civil unrest
Wow there are some truly insane places Id never heard about until now, really great video and the small detail of you pronouncing Genghis Khan correctly was a breath of fresh air as well haha
Being an archaeologist and going to study number 1 is literally some real life Indiana Jones stuff. Would love to see it happen and documented.
Every time I watch a video from this channel, I imagine I get the same feeling of excitement and curiosity that kids hundreds of years ago would feel when explorers would tell their tales of vast new lands.
I thought that I knew about the American West pretty well, but I have to admit that I never heard of the Owyhee Canyon system till now. For that alone I am so grateful to what you do on this channel!
The feeling of isolation and remoteness must be overwhelming in such a place..
I desperately want to go fishing northwest of Yellowknife. Vast expanses of glacier ponds that melt in the summer, full of pike bass and trout that have never seen a human. Enormous rivers filled with king salmon the size of an average person. Ancient sturgeon that are a hundred years old.
Oxygène canyon looks amazing! Lucky you to have been able to visit it! Nice aerial shots with your dog /partner! 😊👍
Love this type of things, when narrated without conspiracies. Good job!
and without dramatic music for emotional guidance
@@MRTN13sadly most people have been programmed to blindly follow and internalize highly edited media
@@umageddonVery well said! 👊🏻👏🏻
What is a "conspiracy?"
You find the most amazing stuff!! I thought I liked to look at remote places on Google Earth but you take this to a whole new level!
absolutely phenomenal video, but that archipelago pronounciation gave me immense whiplash 😂😂. archy pilaygo
OMG ME TOO! I had to stop and break out the blackboard to parse it out.
I used to hunt California big horn in the Owyhee canyons, I left the road and drove 4 hours to little jacks creek canyon and hunted the surrounding canyons. It’s not impossible to get there but not easy either. Those 1000ft canyon walls are loose shale and climbing is also possible since I once had to pack out a Ram that fell to the bottom when it was shot. Since then it became a bombing range for the Air Force so access is now illegal.
8:49 those drone shots are amazing! Never would of heard of this area if it hadn’t been for this video.
#8 is incredible! That artwork is so beautiful!
I was an absolute Google Earth freak until I started losing eyesight. Now it is extremely difficult to simply cruise aroud and look at things here and there (as opposed to having a specific location to go to). I miss it terribly, in fact was a GE Community moderator for about 7 years and loved it. Well, I really enjoyed this post and will check them out on GE! By the way - I live in Oregon and have never heard of those astounding canyons! I do find severe eastern Oregon more interesting to look at than the lush green west - except for the coast.
The images captured in this new video are incredible and jaw dropping! Thank you for sharing this.
POV hi from Alberta, Canada great unique channel man. Even better list I'm hoping you are able to secure safe access to as many of the top 10's as possible.
Looking forward to more.
This may be my new favorite channel
I read years ago that there were still places on Earth where most likely no humans have ever set foot.
2:29 The 'H' is silent. arn-nem. The first 'a' in Kakadu sounds the same as the second 'a' in "banana" when spoken by an American. The second 'a' sounds like the second 'a' in "banana" when spoken by an Australian. Ka-kah-doo
14:00 In your number one location there is a couple of big meteorite craters like the Aorounga and the Gweni-Fada impact craters, I thought you were going to speak about them but didn´t xD
Great video and what an amazing places, can´t imagine the drone videos you could get from those. Thank you for sharing your adventures, best chill explore channel out there.
the earth is so beautiful. both that which was here before us, and that which we've made to leave our mark... brings tears to my eyes
You have no idea how much I want to visit each and every one of these places
You have genuinely opened my on earth and how there are still places that haven’t been explored or straight up look like it belongs in a alien planet
Just wild. I had no idea, have never seen any of these locations featured anywhere. Amazing, rare finds. Thanks for sharing this great video adventure!
these so hard to reach places have not seen any gopro travellers yet, imagine the charging up these things...solar panels maybe?
i say almost impossible to do on your own.
@@wout123100 Absolutely, would take some sponsorship. Maybe the ones with petroglyphs would be easier to get those types of funds for, not sure. But oh wow. What amazing landscapes! Just... stunning. Otherworldly.
@@rynneivarsson751Many could most certainly be fuunded by geological scientific sponsors. The one in Siberia comes to mind. If there's one thing geologists are good at, it is at finding excuses and money to go really REALLY far away to see some rocks.
@@rayres1074 LOL! Not just "rocks..." Special Rocks.
Excellent video, the earth is a wonderful and beautiful place. It is interesting that there are place that could scare the crap out of you being that they are so unknown. I imagine the explorers going West here in the US saw wonders that they could not have imagined.
Thank you for the metric conversions. 👍
Really loved the presentation of this video
No music, or overly sensational voice acting
The silence and map zoomout of these places places paint an incredible mystery, places that civilization will probably never easily access to or unveil its secrets
The list is crazyy. Would be lucky even if got to visit 1 of these places. The Owyhee Canyons on ur drone do look crazy steep.
3:47 ... the what now? Arch-pickle-ageo? Or do you mean arc-i-pel-ahgo?
jangas khan
and jayn-gus
Ark-eh-pel-luh-go
Thank you… that was the craziest mispronunciation ive seen in a minute. I don’t understand how RUclipsrs mispronounce so many words and place names. You obviously have a computer… check how to pronounce things you are unsure about. It can be really annoying and jarring to people…
Also taiga
8:57 Cameraman forgot where he was going
Lmaoo
While we've mapped the world, the idea that there are still unexplored corners of the Earth is awe-inspiring. It's reassuring to know that some places remain beyond human reach.
incredible. inspiring. since i was young i always wanted to explore new frontiers of earth that haven’t been visited by humans for thousands of years. now im in college and working towards making that my life’s work.
This is my favorite all time video of our beautiful earth! Amazing shots of places i mostly never heard of. Keep up the excellent work!!👍🤩
Amazing Nolan! All places that I have never seen before, not even heard of.
Owahee Canyons just blew me away. The scale is scarry.
Thanks so much and
🎄 Happy, peacful Holidays 🎄
Stay safe and healthy, from 🇩🇪
Ooh - love a good list! Could you please put the names of these amazing places in the description?
Just ask ChatGPT
Here are the locations:
* The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad
* Nahanni National Park, Canada
* Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia
* The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen
* The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States
* The Infinity Portal in California
* Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia
* Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia
* Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada
* Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria
* 0:45 - Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria
* 1:47 - Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada
* 2:55 - Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia
* 4:10 - Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia
* 5:15 - The Infinity Portal in California
* 6:05 - The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States
* 7:37 - The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen
* 8:20 - Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia
* 9:45 - Nahanni National Park, Canada
* 12:20 - The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad
* 15:10 - Tibesti Mountains, Chad
With timestamps, I used Gemini 2.
Bonus:
Traveling to all those places would be very expensive. Here is a breakdown of the estimated cost of travel to each place:
* The Ahnet Plateau, Northern Chad: $5,000 - $10,000. This is a very remote and difficult to access location. You would likely need to hire a guide and a 4x4 vehicle, which would be expensive.
* Nahanni National Park, Canada: $3,000 - $5,000. This park is also remote and requires a float plane to access.
* Burkhan Khaldun Mountain, Northern Mongolia: $2,000 - $4,000. This area is also remote, but there are some tour operators that offer trips to the mountain.
* The "Bottomless Pit" in Eastern Yemen: $5,000 - $10,000. Yemen is currently in a state of civil war, so it is very dangerous and expensive to travel there.
* The Owyhee Canyonlands in the Western United States: $1,000 - $2,000. This area is relatively easy to access, but you would need to rent a car.
* The Infinity Portal in California: $500 - $1,000. This is a relatively easy to access location, but you would need to rent a car.
* Patomskiy Crater in Southeastern Siberia: $3,000 - $5,000. This is a very remote location that is difficult to access.
* Arnhem Land in the Northern Territories of Australia: $2,000 - $4,000. This area is remote and requires a permit to visit.
* Astronaut Canyon on Devon Island, Northern Canada: $5,000 - $10,000. This is a very remote and difficult to access location.
* Ksar Draa in Northern Algeria: $1,000 - $2,000. This area is relatively easy to access, but you would need to hire a car and driver.
The total cost of travel to all these places would be between $25,500 and $46,000. This is a very rough estimate, and the actual cost could be higher or lower depending on your travel style and how much time you spend in each location.
@@nobodyinnoutdoors Thank you!
The waii canyon has to be one of the most breath-taking place I have "seen" 😱
So many impossible to reach locations, mind blowing geographically alone, and then you find out there are ancient artworks and remnants of lost civilizations there too. It’s humbling.
3:47 Ar chip e Lego 😂 ⁉️ it's pronounced Arkipeligo 😂 also, WOW! standing on the edge of that canyon 🤯 and some great images. 👍🏻
“archipelaygoh” 💀 3:46
“jangus khan” 💀 10:14
"greatest khanquerer" 💀 10:11
Your channel is my favorite now, hands down.
I feel insignificant 😅. Excellent video
This is one of the coolest videos I've ever seen!
my personal favourite is the shunak crater in kazakhstan. it has a mere handful of photos on google, and i'm surprised it has any.
its location is extremely remote, the closest 'highway' (a paved road) is +100km away, and the closest city is ~200km away.
the only way to get to the crater is to either:
1. get off the karaganda - almaty highway to a land access road going to a military base (illegal) ~150km away from the highway. at the base, turn to the crater 'road' and drive at least 40km with nothing but you, the steppe, and the sketchiest land access road ever.
2. try to catch a flight to balqash, and drive on mostly unpaved roads for 150km to reach moyinty (мойынты), a small village with no hotels or places to stay. from moyinty, drive another 50km on a land access road that is only ever used by i'd say about 5 cars per year, with no settlement nearby.
one of the methods includes a crime, and both are extremely dangerous due to the lack of cell service and human population on either of the ways, as well as everchanging steppe conditions and extreme weather.
i would never even attempt this, even with experience, as no amount of it would constitute going to shunak.
Thanks for sharing, that crater looks amazing... and the landscape around it, wow. Moynty looks like it'd be just as interesting to visit as well, I wonder what it's like to live there. I wonder what that collection of boxes is to the NW of Moynty? I thought graveyard but not sure. It looks like they use train to get their stuff in and out, but this could also be a way to reach Moynty.
7:36 That has to be the Bruneau Canyon. I worked on an Air Force bombing range in that area, and visited the canyon quite a few times. Really neat area.
Holy smokers, that canyon is just amazing!!
I loved the drone footage especially! A nice touch.
"the fact that we don't know the origin of it points towards it being a logistical nightmare to get there" never change man, also this is the reason why we haven't explored the Oceans, it's easier logistically to make it to space
What about the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau, just imagine how many untouched and beautiful locations would be hidden there
exactly. Trees can not survive there. Only endless mountains and winds......
9:43 is Literally the pit Daniel was thrown into💀💀💀
Underrated
When I was younger, I used to “just go” to a new place that I heard about. I had a rule against owning anything that I could not carry on foot alone, or too valuable to leave. I saw the whole of the USA before I was 18. I hitched rides, and sometimes took buses, and stayed wherever I could find work, or would live on my savings for short periods without work. The eighties were a different universe!
How I envy you!
Would've been nice if the older gens tried to make life as easy as this for the future gens
@ if you want to have an effect on the world and the future, become a teacher. You don’t have to do anything but care for, love, and be a good example of a decent person, and never lie to them. Teachers have more to do with raising children than parents do, too often.
I have endeavored to speak life to the young people in my life. Sometimes just acknowledging kids can make a difference to them. The “little things” in life add up!
Thanks for an enlightening video, almost completely free of silly claims about “spirits”. It took me to places I’ve never heard of and could not imagine existed. Well done!
thank u for introducing me to these unknown places, its so cool!!
3:47 this was the weirdest pronunciation of archipelago i have ever heard lol
I don't buy the idea of something staying "unexplored forever". Except obviously for human-restricted areas like for the military. (Which btw is disgusting that they take up historically interesting areas like the Volcanic canyon for their warmongering purposes)
With the advancement of technology, specifically AI and robotics, we'll eventually be able to acquire footage and samples from anywhere on the planet even if humans can't physically go there.
7:45 is that your dog cause if so, nerves of steel my dog I would have to keep in the car he is to clumsy and may fall off into the abyss 💀💀💀
Thanks for mentioning Mongolia here. Burkhan Khaldun is not hard to reach its close from small village and there are natives still living inside the protected area. During winter its very easy to get I went there 3 times already. Landscape is impressive enough to attract me every single year! Thanks for the intresting video
Imagine the precious stones you can find at the waii canyon...
This dude really say "Arch a palego"
I am Godsmacked!😮
It amazes me how good americans are at finding interesting ways to mispronounce any conceivably Australian word
It’s beautiful that there are places like this still left unexplored in the world
the canyon part really gives a perspective on just how big our world is, something alot of people fail to realise
3:02 a hand with a hole?
10:16 JangusKahn 😂 wth narrator
It was pronounced “Chengis Kahn”
"Jengis" / "Chingis" is the correct pronunciation. Some English dude decided to transliterate Mongolian into english using a G to make the J sound, like the word Giraffe.
Everyone forgot it was supposed to be a J, not a hard G, and we ended up saying Gengis and not Jengis.
In modern Mongolian latin-script spelling, his name is said Chingis. But Jengis is close enough as CH and J are effectively the same sound in many languages (including Mongolian)
That canyon is insane really, my dog would walk straight over the edge though...
Also I'm in tears about ppl correcting your pronunciation of Genghis Khan when it's actually correct 😭
the green sahara period likely hides some of the most incredible archaeological and palaeontological artifacts/ sites left undiscovered. Imagine finding the remains of villages or settlements along long vanished rivers, evidence of trade with other cultures, unique artwork and history largely absent from current understanding.
Not earth shattering, but the scope of what is just inaccessible in war torn and sparsely populated parts of the Sahara is incredible to me.
The Waii canyon looks literally breathtaking. It just makes me wonder as it sits there and puts to shame anything humanity has ever made.