Ghost towns hiding in the world's deserts
Deserted towns

There are more abandoned towns across the world’s deserts than you might first think. The desert plains across the USA play home to a plethora of Wild West towns that went from booming mining villages to lifeless towns within decades. Similarly, the likes of South America, Australia and Southern Africa unveil the crumbling shells of once-thriving towns and villages that were abandoned and reclaimed by the desert. Here are the world’s communities that have become eerie ghost towns and, interestingly, manmade attractions among the sands.
Calico, California, USA

Calico, California, USA

Calico, California, USA

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Kolmanskop, Namibia

The community, located nine miles east of the harbour town of Lüderitz, became deserted in the late 1920s when an even bigger diamond deposit was discovered some 160 miles (99km) south of here. Today, aside from the odd Namib wild horse, no one inhabits this sweltering region dubbed ‘the forbidden zone’ and this once vibrant ghost town is now disappearing into the sand.
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Rhyolite, Nevada, USA

Rhyolite, Nevada, USA

With a thriving community and infrastructure – including a school, banks, stock exchange and railway station – it was a prosperous place to be, until the San Francisco earthquake and financial crisis hit in 1907. Many mines across the region were forced to close and by the 1920s, this once boomtown became completely deserted.
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Rhyolite, Nevada, USA

Today, Rhyolite is one of the most photographed ghost towns in the West and visitors are drawn to its intriguing collection of ruins including a well-preserved railroad depot and its well-known Bottle House, made from hundreds of Adolphus Busch (now Budweiser) bottles. The town has also featured in a string of films such as Six String Samurai and The Air Mail.
Humberstone and Santa Laura, Chile

Humberstone and Santa Laura, Chile

Humberstone and Santa Laura, Chile

Goldfield, Arizona, USA

Goldfield, Arizona, USA

Goldfield, Arizona, USA

These days, this quintessential Wild West mining town in the vast Sonoran Desert has evolved into a ‘living’ ghost town rather than a deserted one, with the preserved historic buildings, horseback rides and myriad activities adding to the tourist attractions. There's a museum, authentic Wild West saloon and underground tours in the once-working mines and the site is encircled by the ‘Superstition’ narrow-gauge railway, which offers a narrated journey around the town. Spooky ghost tours are held at night.
Terlingua, Texas, USA

Some people travel to this arid corner of southwest Texas to see vast canyons carved out by the Rio Grande and marvel at the towering Chisos mountain range of Big Bend National Park. But the ghost town of Terlingua has also become an attraction for its eerie ruined buildings and boho vibe.
Terlingua, Texas, USA

Terlingua, Texas, USA

Gwalia, Western Australia

Gwalia, Western Australia

Silverton, New South Wales, Australia

On the edge of the desert, west of Broken Hill City, the ghost town of Silverton is another reminder of Australia’s rich mining history. Now famed for its movie appearances (the town provided a backdrop for 1960s horror Journey into Darkness and Mad Max 2), Silverton once had a population of 3,000 thanks to the plethora of silver mines which peppered the region in the 1880s.
Silverton, New South Wales, Australia

Glenrio, Texas, USA

Glenrio, Texas, USA

The tiny town was made up of no more than 30 people but had a plethora of shops and businesses, a Glenrio Tribune newspaper, as well as a gas station, to cater for the stream of travellers who passed through on holiday. Sadly, Glenrio’s fate changed in the 1970s when the Interstate 40 was built, bypassing the community, and the road-tripper’s paradise couldn’t survive.
Glenrio, Texas, USA

All that’s left of this eerie ghost town are the crumbling remains of the old motel, post office and former gas station, surrounded by miles of hot and dusty desert.
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Milparinka, New South Wales, Australia

Like a time capsule in the desert, Milparinka is what is left of a former mining town that was left to decay on the edge of the Australian desert following the area’s gold rush era of the late 1800s. In between the towns of Broken Hill and Tibooburra in New South Wales, it would take a long drive across the arid terracotta desert to reach this sun-baked ghost town. But many do, to see the crumbling remains of its school, general store, bank, pub, post office and sandstone courthouse whose roof dates back to 1896.
Milparinka, New South Wales, Australia

Old Town Al’Ula, Saudi Arabia

Old Town Al’Ula, Saudi Arabia

Old Town Al’Ula, Saudi Arabia

By the 7th century, the town had become deserted before a walled city was built on top of it and it was bustling once again until the 1980s when the last inhabitants left. With rumours of a new ‘cultural hub’ being developed here, time is running out to see this ghost town in its current otherworldly state.
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Gleeson, Arizona, USA

Gleeson, Arizona, USA

Unlike Gleeson, the community thrived for a little longer in Pearce, with a post office that continued to run until the 1960s (and is now a home) and a general store which was restored and placed on the National Register of Historic Buildings. Apart from that, the town – which includes an unrestored twin of the Gleeson jail – became largely reclaimed by the desert, while Gleeson Jail itself now houses a mini museum of newspaper articles, artefacts and memorabilia.
Al Jazirat al Hamra, UAE

Al Jazirat al Hamra, UAE

Farina, South Australia, Australia

Farina, South Australia, Australia

At its peak, a population of 600 residents called this place home, but the town’s luck changed in the early 20th century when the railway line was extended and rerouted and the town was ravaged by drought and dust storms. Today, Farina, found 370 miles (595km) north of Adelaide, is a bona fide ghost town where just a few deserted buildings remain.
Nelson, Nevada, USA

Nelson, Nevada, USA

Nelson, Nevada, USA

Located just 45 minutes from the famous Vegas Strip, the eerie ghost town also has guided tours through the Techatticup Mine tunnels, which extend deep into the surrounding hills.
Metropolis, Nevada, USA

Situated just 15 miles (9.5km) from Nevada’s Wells, this ghost town never lived up to its name. Metropolis was developed in the early 20th century in order to grow wheat in the surrounding area but conflict over water rights and low agricultural prices shut the town down by the mid-1930s. Now all that is left are the remains of a school and a hotel as well as seven ranches nearby.
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