Nature is beautiful and wonderful. Nature creates wonders, sometime it’s really hard to believe that they are actually exist. In our daily life, we experience some crazy stuff that makes us to think about it. Like these amazing things in nature, it’s hard to believe in, but all these things are real and true.

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Cenote, Underground Natural Spring in Mexico

Nature creates wonders, sometime its really hard to believe, this underground natural spring in Mexico is one of them. Known as Cenote, is a natural pit, or sinkhole resulting from the collapse of limestone bedrock that exposes groundwater underneath.

Cenotes, mostly associated with the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico. Nearly 7,000 cenotes in Yucatán Peninsula were discovered. These were sometimes used by the ancient Maya for sacrificial offerings. The Mayans revered cenotes because they were a water source in dry times.

Cenote, Underground Natural Spring in Mexico

The Wave, Arizona

Another most amazing things in nature, The Wave located in Arizona, United States. It is a gorgeous red sandstone formation on the slopes of the Coyote Buttes in the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness, located in northern portion of the U.S. state of Arizona.

The Beautiful sandstone formation is famous among hikers and photographers for its colorful, undulating forms, and the rugged. In addition, one of the best hiking trails as well as best photographic place in the world.

The Wave, Arizona

Shimmering Shores of Vaadhoo, Maldives

Pinpricks of light on the shore seem to mirror stars, as seen in above picture taken on Vaadhoo Island in the Maldives. Glowing Blue Waves, the biological light, or bioluminescence, in the waves is the product of marine microbes called phytoplankton. It’s also one of the best honeymoon locations around the world.

Vaadhoo Island, Maldives is known for being a heaven on Earth. It has a lot of surprises for visitors, that are revealed at night. The island is much famous for it’s naturally glittering and sparkling sea water. It also known as “the Sea of Stars”.

Shimmering Shores of Vaadhoo, Maldives

The Blood Falls in Antarctica

Antarctica is the world’s coldest place. Blood Falls is an outflow of water, flowing from the Taylor Glacier onto the ice-covered surface of West Lake Bonney in the Taylor Valley of the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Victoria Land, East Antarctica.

The reddish falls were first discovered in Antarctica in 1911, by the Australian geologist Griffith Taylor, where he noticed a river had stained the surrounding cliff of ice with a deep red color. Previously, he had believed it was due to algae discoloring the water, however that hypothesis was never verified.

The Blood Falls in Antarctica

The Ghost Trees in Pakistan

The eye-catching phenomenon is an unexpected side-effect of the flooding in parts of Pakistan. Millions of spiders climbed up into the trees to escape the rising flood waters, shrouding them with their silky webs. Because of the scale of the flooding and the fact that the water has taken so long to recede, many trees have become cocooned in ghostly spiders webs.

The Ghost Trees in Pakistan

The Dirty Thunderstorm

A dirty thunderstorm, also “Volcanic lightning” is a weather phenomenon that occurs when lightning is produced in a volcanic plume. A study indicated that electrical charges are generated when rock fragments, ash, and ice particles in a volcanic plume collide and produce static charges, just as ice particles collide in regular thunderstorms. Volcanic eruptions also release large amounts of water, which may help fuel these thunderstorms.

The Dirty Thunderstorm