Who likes to travel and venturing around the world is always in search of new destinations. If you are one of those people, stay tuned, because the destinations listed here are incredible places that you cannot visit. Were you curious? We'll tell you more later.
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Here is the list of 5 amazing places that are just not better because we can't visit
Located in the Andaman archipelagos, in the Bay of Bengal, this island had everything to be a tropical paradise in the waters of the Indian Ocean. However, it is home to one of the most isolated tribes on the planet, the Sentinelese, who arrived on the island after a immigration that took place from Africa about 60,000 years ago and violently reject any contact with the outside world. outside.
One of the main Shinto shrines in Japan, Ise Shrine is located in Mie Prefecture. This shrine was built in the year 4 BC. and dedicated to the Sun Goddess, Amaterasu, and has since been demolished and rebuilt every 20 years. With thousands of years of history, the temple can only be accessed in its entirety by the imperial family and senior Shinto priests.
Located 35km away from the Brazilian coast (São Paulo), landing on this island is prohibited by the government. With uneven terrain, the island has no beaches, just a small lighthouse. Ilha da Queimada Grande is a piece of the Atlantic Forest untouched by man, as it is home to 15,000 snakes of the species Bothrops insularis, or jararaca ilhoa.
Currently, access to the “island of snakes” is very difficult for researchers, explorers or tourists who want to risk visiting it.
It is a cave from the Paleolithic Era located in southwest France, near Montignac. Its discovery in the year 1940 was an important chapter in the knowledge of prehistoric arts, as the cave paintings on the cave walls date from 15 to 17 thousand years!
The paintings only survived for so long because the environment was stable and sterile. However, the visit of millions of tourists each year has exposed this historic place to carbon dioxide, humidity and decay. In this way, the Cave of Lascaux was permanently closed for visitation in 1963.