Wednesday, May 15, 2013

10 The least Rarely touched by humans in the World.

10 The least Rarely touched by humans in the World.1. Namibia

Namibia is one of the least populated country in the world. The southern African country named after the nearby desert that is the Namib Desert, which is home to around 2,500 cheetah tail and a quarter of the total population of cheetahs in the world. With a field of giant dunes, ancient petroglyphs, crater and waterfall, Namibia is one of the most untouched places in Africa.
2. Galapagos

Although Charles Darwin's trip to the islands unique here has made a lot of tourists come countless, Galapagos Islands is still a place that is relatively original and untouched. The archipelago is home to giant tortoises, iguanas, sea lions, penguins, whales and fish and have hundreds of endemic species of plants and animals. In these islands, the human population is only about 23,000 inhabitants. The archipelago has been a marine reserve for fifty years.
3. Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea is one of the most rural and least explored in the world. Scientists believe that many species of plants and animals that have not been discovered in the world is in the interior of the state forest. Exploitation of natural resources in the country is hampered by difficult terrain, as well as the legal system and the high cost of developing infrastructure. Because of all these problems, most of the places there are still original and untouched by man.
4. Seychelles

Seychelles has the largest percentage of conservation land than any other country in the world, where about 50 percent of this island nation is protected. Therefore, these islands have beautiful beaches pristine and unspoiled and a habitat for the black parrot species. There are 490 kilometers of coastline along the islands in this country, and there are only relatively few visitors who vacation there.
5. Bhutan

More than 60 percent of the country is covered by forests, and a quarter of its territory has been designated as a national park or nature reserve areas. The country is also known for steep mountains and valleys, making it a center for biodiversity.
6. Daintree National Park, Australia

Daintree National Park in Far North Queensland, Australia, is a rainforest conservation of 110 million-year-old, one of the oldest ecosystems on earth. The park is also a habitat for thousands of species of plants and trees that are over 2,500 years old.
7. Fiordland, New Zealand

At the south end of the west coast of New Zealand, Fiordland region is still very well preserved, untouched and empty of human development. With a varied terrain of the high mountains to the rocky waters, Fiordland has never had a significant permanent population. Even the indigenous Maori only visited this place while just for hunting, fishing and gathering precious jade. In addition, air currents blowing in this region of Antarctica, so the air Fiordland is one of the cleanest on the planet.
8. Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia

Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia is empty wilderness, with the Pacific Ocean to the east and the Sea of ​​Okhotsk to the west. The peninsula is also filled with volcanoes and glaciers. And large earthquakes up to magnitude 9.0 on the Richter scale has rocked the peninsula in the last five decades.
9. Atacama Desert, Chile

Atacama Desert is one of the most bizarre places in the world, the desert really do not get rain at all. Sands cover an area of ​​103,600 square kilometers, and in the soil there is absolutely no life, so NASA can design test their Mars landings there. Because of its height, found barely a cloud in the sky, and coupled with dry air and lack of light pollution and radio interference, making the desert as one of the best places in the world to conduct astronomical observations.
10. Antarctica

Antarctica is a completely untouched by humans. This continent is the only continent that was never inhabited by humans. 96 percent part of the continent is covered with ice, which can average more than 1.6 km thick. The number of people conducting and supporting scientific research and other work on the continent and the closest islands varies from about 1,000 in winter to about 5,000 people in the summer.
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