THE WORLD IS COVERED IN haunts, frights and macabre
memorials.
From lavish decor made of human bone to eerie dolls,
abandoned towns and death-defying drops, the world offers a mix of natural and
supposedly paranormal frights at a number of goose bump-inducing sites
scattered across the globe.
Here's a look at 13 of some of the creepiest places
around the world:

Aokigahara – Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
Aokigahara is also known as "Suicide
Forest" or the "Sea of Trees." It sits near Japan's Mount Fuji
in Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park in Japan, and is known for its dense woods.
The forest was the subject of a 2016 film, and Vice reports that after a
popular novel set in the forest was published, it became the scene of suicides
at a rate of an estimated 50 to 100 people a year.

Chernobyl – Chernobyl, Ukraine
Chernobyl is a closed but not fully decommissioned
nuclear power station in the restricted Chernobyl Exclusion Zone north of Kiev,
Ukraine. The facility was evacuated on April 27, 1986 after a catastrophic
nuclear accident, still regarded as the most devastating nuclear accident in
history. Abandoned structures reveal the frantic pace of abandoning the city of
nearby Pripyat.
The Stanley Hotel – Colorado, United States
Americans are likely familiar with The Stanley
Hotel, a 142-room Colonial Revival hotel in Estes Park, Colorado, and made
famous as the inspiration for horror novelist Stephen King's Overlook Hotel in
"The Shining." The Stanley has developed its own claims of paranormal
activity overtime.

Capuchin Catacombs – Palermo, Sicily, Italy
The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo are burial crypts
in Palermo, Sicily, in southern Italy. They draw visitors as a somewhat
gruesome tourist attraction. The catacombs act as a cemetery to an estimated
8,000 mummies that line the walls. Some of the human remains are now skeletal,
while the catacombs also hold well-preserved bodies. The last body was interred
at the site in 1920.

Bran Castle – Bran, Romania
Bran Castle, also known as "Dracula's Castle," is a national monument and landmark in Romania. Many associate vampires with Transylvania, the region in central Romania, in large part because of Bram Stoker's "Dracula." The House of Draculesti ruled Transylvania hundreds of years ago and one ruler, Vlad III, is said to have been so barbaric that he earned the name "Vlad the Impaler."

The North Yungas Road – Bolivia
A fear of heights can go a long way – sometimes into a 2,000-foot abyss. This is especially true along the North Yungas Road, which leads from La Paz to Coroico in the Yungas Region of Bolivia. The two-way road travels between that abyss and solid rock. Its 12-foot-wide path has earned it the nickname of "Death Road."

Village of Nagoro – Nagoro, Japan
A dwindling aging population and low youth-retention rate in Nagoro, Japan, has left behind a shrinking village. Artist Ayano Tsukimi reportedly moved back to her hometown to find the lessened local population. In response, she created life-size dolls to place around the village to give it a sense of life. Atlas Obscura reports there are now at least 350 toy citizens inhabiting the village.

The Door to Hell – Derweze, Turkmenistan
The so-called "Door to Hell" or "Gate to Hell," is a natural gas crater in Derweze, Turkmenistan. The crater is the result of a natural gas field that collapsed into an underground cavern in 1971. Geologists reportedly set it on fire to curb the spread of methane gas, but it continues to burn.

Hanging Coffins of Sagada – Sagada, Philippines
The Hanging Coffins of Sagada are just a few of the cliff-side burials around the world. The tombs in the Philippines reportedly follow an ancient funeral custom that entombs the deceased in coffins attached to rock faces or within caves in the face of cliffs. Ancient literature from the Tang Dynasty suggests the coffins' placements corresponded with status, while others say the placements prevented animals from reaching the bodies and did not take up value farm space for burials, according to CNN. Philippines Lifestyle reports that the Sagada people have practiced such burials for more than 2,000 years, and that some of the coffins are "well over a century old."

Beelitz-Heilstätten Hospital – Beelitz, Germany
Once a sanatorium to reportedly house people with fatal tuberculosis, the site in Germany was converted into a military hospital complex used during World War I. Adolf Hitler is said to have been treated at the site after he was wounded in the war. The primarily abandoned complex still features crumbling surgical and psychiatry wards. A small portion of the complex is reportedly still used for neurological rehabilitation and Parkinson's research.

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