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Where is a good place to travel?

1. Maldives

Maldives is composed of 26 coral atolls and nearly 1 190 islands, and it can be called "poster boy" of Indian Ocean island countries. These coral atolls are usually divided into 5-0/0 inhabited islands and 20-60 uninhabited islands. This unique geographical feature gives entrepreneurs the opportunity to develop tourism resources in Maldives. They can build a resort on a desert island to attract foreign tourists to live temporarily and make them addicted to Robinson Crusoe.

Except for Maldives, we may not find such a vague boundary between land and sea anywhere on earth. Although this feature endows the Maldives with charming tropical scenery and warm climate, this island country with a population of only 400,000 has therefore become the first target of global warming. The average altitude of Maldives is only 5 feet (about 1.5 meters), and the highest point is only 7 feet 7 inches (about 2.3 meters). As the sea level rises, tides and storms will cause more damage to this beautiful world. Many islands will eventually be swallowed up by seawater, and residents will inevitably become "climate warming refugees".

2. Auckland Islands, New Zealand

Auckland Islands in southern New Zealand, located in the bitter and cold south latitude "violent 50 degrees" (commonly known by sailors as the waters between 50 degrees and 60 degrees south latitude), were ruthlessly destroyed by the roaring sea breeze. This compact archipelago has five islands, which were formed by several dormant volcanoes that slept for a long time millions of years ago. Auckland Island is the largest of them. Auckland Islands has a total area of 24 1.3 square miles (about 625 square kilometers), and most areas are composed of jagged mountains that have been seriously eroded, and the height of the mountains can reach 2 170 feet (about 660 meters).

In the13rd century, humans may have settled in this archipelago for some time. With the discovery of the remains of residents on the island, Auckland Islands became the southernmost tip of Polynesian explorers' exploration. In the19th century, people tried to settle on the island several times, but they only lived for a few years at most. During the Second World War, the New Zealand government built a weather station on the island and sent people to station it. After dismantling the weather station, these islands became a barren world.

3. Al Dabboura Island in Seychelles

Al Dabboura Island is the second largest coral atoll in the world, with a total area of 60 square miles (about 155.4 square kilometers). It consists of four independent islands. The name "Al Dabboura" comes from Arabic. Hundreds of years ago, humans knew about the existence of this island.

This island group is located 265 miles (about 426.5 kilometers) northwest of Madagascar, and it is the westernmost big island of Seychelles. The capital horse is located more than 700 miles (about 1 126.5 kilometers) east. Al Dabboura Island is 2 1 mile (about 34 kilometers) long, 9 miles (about 14.5 kilometers) wide and 26.25 feet (about 8 meters) above sea level. Why this island is uninhabited has become a mystery.

Al Dabboura Island is home to one of the largest giant tortoises in the world. There are about 1.5 million Al Dabboura giant tortoises (scientific name Dipsochelys? Dussumieri) lives on this atoll, and they don't have to worry about being killed because the island is uninhabited. It is worth mentioning that the giant tortoise Al Dabboura is not always favored by the goddess of luck. /kloc-In the 9th century, whale and seal hunters and long-distance navigators often hunted giant turtles on the island. By the end of 1900, the giant tortoise was on the verge of extinction.

In addition, Bula Island in Aldabe is also the largest land crab in the world-coconut crab (scientific name Birgus? Latro)' s home. Netizens are no strangers to this animal. A picture showing coconut crabs hiding behind trash cans was once widely circulated on the Internet.

4. Tetpare Island in Solomon Islands

Tetpare Island in Solomon Islands is known as the "last desert island". Since the middle of19th century, indigenous tribes fled to the surrounding islands under the threat of barbarians hunting for heads, and it has been uninhabited. Tetapare Island covers an area of 45.5 square miles (about 1 18 square kilometers) and is the largest uninhabited island in the western Pacific Ocean.

Tetpare Descendants Association is a registered Solomon Islands charity organization. Since 2002, it has been responsible for monitoring Tetapare Island, protecting its forests and other natural resources, and for the benefit of future generations. Under the supervision of the Future Generation Association, an ecological resort was built on Tetpare Island, which provided employment opportunities for local residents, raised funds for the conservation plan and raised public awareness of the unique status of Tetpare Island.

5. Rock Islands in Palau

Known as "Chelbacheb" in Palau, the Rock Islands are famous for the Palau episode of the American reality show "Survivor" which was broadcast in early 2005. This archipelago consists of 250 to 300 islands, with a total land area of only 18 square miles (about 47 square kilometers), and its rich ecological diversity is its pride. The highest points of these limestone islands and coral islands are 680 feet (about 207 meters) above sea level. These islands are densely forested, with many hidden lagoons and other lakes and a series of unique creatures.

Palau's Rock Islands is a beautiful and rich world. Although it may be uninhabited now, humans may have left many footprints on this island in the past few thousand years. One of the strangest evidences is the discovery of the so-called "miniature man" remains. At first, people thought that miniature people were related to Hobbits in loris Island, but now they think that miniature people are ancient Palauans, and their short stature is due to island dwarfism.

6. Costa Rican island of Corcos

Corcos Island is a bit like the Galapagos Islands in the north. It is hidden alone in a corner of the Pacific Ocean, about 340 miles (550 kilometers) from the west coast of Costa Rica. This roughly rectangular island, with an area of 9.2 square miles (about 23.85 square kilometers), is the home of a certain number of deer, wild boar, wild cats and mice introduced by humans intentionally or unintentionally. Although there are abundant available fresh water resources here, human beings have never settled here for a long time. As shown in the video below, there are a lot of marine life in the waters near Corcos Island.

Isla Nablal (Isla? Nublar) Island may be based on Corcos Island. This speculation is based on the fact that isla nublar means Kirishima in Spanish, and Corcos Island is the only small island near Central America or South America, with a huge fog forest ecosystem.

7. Phoenix Islands in Kiribati

The Phoenix Islands consists of eight small islands and several coral reefs, which are located between Hawaii and Fiji in the South Pacific. The area of the whole archipelago is only 1 1 square mile (27.6 square kilometers). Except Canton Island, the largest island, where more than 20 people live, the rest of the islands are uninhabited. In the past two centuries, people tried several times to settle or immigrate to the Phoenix Islands, but all their efforts ended in failure. The last group of residents evacuated the island on 1963.

Although Phoenix Islands is a part of Kiribati, Canton Island is an isolated island located about1765km east of South Tarawa, the capital of the country. There is an uncertain statement about the southernmost island of the Phoenix Islands. Some people think that Nikumaru Island (formerly known as Gardner Island) was the emergency landing site of American female pilot Emilia Earhart and co-pilot Fred Noonan in July 1937, when they were flying a twin-engine Lockheed? Electra flies around the world.

8. Antong Marine National Park, Thailand

Antong Ocean National Park (built at 1980) consists of 42 small islands in the Gulf of Thailand. Although the total area of this park is 39.5 square miles (102 square kilometers), only 7 square miles (18 square kilometers) are dry land. "Ang? G-string means "golden bowl". This archipelago has a warm and sunny climate, which makes Suratani province in Thailand a very famous tourist attraction.

The islands in Antong Ocean National Park are the scenes in Alex Garland's novel published in 1996 and the movie The Beach starring Leonardo DiCaprio in 2000. They razed the beach before filming, but after the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, the beach here recovered its original appearance and characteristics.

9. Maruruchi Island, Mamanuka Islands, Fiji

The tiny Maruchi Island was the shooting scene of the 2000 film "The Life of a Desert Island".

Mamanuka Islands (a part of Fiji) has about 20 volcanic islands. At high tide, these islands are reduced to about 13. Many small islands in Mamanuka Islands of Fiji are uninhabited, and the available fresh water resources seem to be the main factor to determine whether they can live.

A small island in Mamanuka, Fiji, won a special honor: the tiny island of Maruruchi was the shooting scene of the 2000 film "The Rest of a Desert Island". Chuck Nohrlander, played by Tom Hanks, encountered several difficulties in survival on Maruchi Island, including making a fire and finding fresh water sources that can be used. Fortunately, during this time, his companion Wilson has been accompanying him and has become the spiritual pillar for him to continue to live.

10. Bell's Pyramid Island

Visually, the 1844 feet (562 meters) high Pyramid is probably the most impressive island in the world. It is located in the Pacific Ocean about 13 miles (20km) southeast of lord howe island and about 370 miles (600km) east of Australia. 1788, the island formed by volcanic rocks was first discovered by Navy Colonel Henry Likubod Bell. It was not until nearly 1 century later that the first man set foot on the rugged coast of this island very carefully. To be sure, on this island of 3600 feet (1 100 meters) × 1000 feet (300 meters), there is not a flat place left by a volcano with a history of 7 million years.

You may think that the pyramid of Ber may be an ideal paradise for rock climbers and fixed-point divers. 1965, it is true that someone successfully climbed to the top of this "small steeple" for the first time. 1982 completely banned climbing the pyramid of Ber, but the climbing activity of 1990 was a special case, which was the result of the application of the American government.

I have to mention devon island.

In this list, there are no big islands and small islands in the Arctic and Antarctic, because those islands are not suitable for living at all, which is different from the "desert island" mentioned here. However, we should mention devon island. It is the 27th largest island in the world and the largest uninhabited island. Devon island is located in the northwest of baffin island, with an area of 2 133 1 square mile (about 55,247 square kilometers).

The climate here is cold and dry, and there is a Horton crater with a diameter of 14 miles (23 kilometers), which is an ideal testing ground for future rovers and settlements. Elton john once sang in a song, This is no place for you to raise children.