#10 Taj Mahal (India)
Located in the ancient capital of India, the Taj Mahal is one of the seven wonders of the world. The most eye-catching feature of the Taj Mahal is the main building made of pure white marble. The imperial tomb is neatly symmetrical up and down, and the central dome is 62 meters high, which is breathtaking. There are four minarets about 41 meters high around it, and between the towers are tombstones studded with 35 different types of semi-precious stones.
[adace-ad id=”884″]The cemetery covers an area of 17 hectares and is a slightly long circle. It is surrounded by red sandstone walls. The entrance gate is also built of red rock. The gate leads to the burial chamber of King Shajiehan and the princess, in the middle of the chamber. They placed their sarcophagus. In front of the majestic Mu Taj Mahal is a clear water channel. Fruit trees and cypress trees are planted on both sides of the water channel, symbolizing life and death respectively.
#11 Canadian Rockies
The Canadian Rockies mountain range spans the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta. With jagged, ice-capped peaks, including towering Mt. Robson, it’s a region of alpine lakes, diverse wildlife and outdoor recreation sites. Yoho National Park is home to the massive Takakkaw Falls. Other national parks are Jasper, with the famously accessible Athabasca Glacier, and Banff, site of glacier-fed Lake Louise.
#12 Ayers Rock (Australia)
Ayers Rock is 348 meters high and 3000 meters long, with a circumference of about 8.5 kilometers. It is wide in the east and narrows in the west. It is the largest single rock in the world. It is majestic and majestic, like a natural monument that transcends time and space. In 1873, a surveyor named William Christie Gauss straddled this desert when he was hungry and thirsty and found this rocky mountain as high as the sky in front of him.