When nature looks more like art: astonishing aerial photos of the world
High art

Satellites circle our planet, planes cross the oceans and drones flit across the skies – in the 21st century we are incredibly lucky to be able to view the ground from high above. Things look different from up there and a bird's-eye perspective can make ordinary places look like extraordinary artworks.
Click through the gallery to see incredible aerial images of our planet that look like works of art...
Mine in Xinjiang, China

Mountain pass in Transylvania, Romania

Transylvania is a historical region of Romania that is surrounded by the craggy Carpathian mountain range. Picturesque mountain roads with steep hairpin turns meander through the peaks and spruce forests – a riot of fall colours in autumn and covered in a blanket of snow in winter.
The world's most amazing roads as you've never seen them before...
Tulip fields, the Netherlands

Tulips in the Netherlands' flower fields bloom every spring. This beautiful sight is a huge tourist attraction, as well as an economic boon for the country – the Dutch produce more than four billion tulip bulbs each year. Find out where to spot the colourful displays along the Netherlands' tulip trail.
Ice sheet, Greenland

Just inland from the coast of southwestern Greenland you can see the pretty patterns formed by blue pools and crevasses where the meltwater has forced its way through the glacier.
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Lluta River, Atacama Desert, Chile

The Dead Sea, Israel and Jordan

Terraced rice fields, Vietnam

Bangkok interchange, Thailand

Toll-controlled access highways criss-cross the capital of Thailand. Built to ease Bangkok’s considerable traffic congestion, the interchanges are as beautiful as they are complex.
Check out these mesmerising images from the Drone Photo Awards...
Pink Lake, Western Australia

The Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Los Angeles container port, USA

A solar farm in California, USA

Farmland, Kazakhstan

Staircase in the Vatican Museums, Italy

Hallstatt in winter, Austria

The Nile, Egypt

Bangkok's Ratchada Train Market, Thailand

England's Chalk Horse, UK
This fascinating stylised chalk outline has been part of England’s rolling Oxfordshire Downs since the Bronze Age. Nobody knows why the original horse was etched into the county’s highest hill, but volunteers keep it in chalky white perfect condition.
Jodhpur, India

Okavango Delta, Botswana

The Italian countryside, Tuscany

The Italian countryside, Pavia

The Nazca Lines in Peru

The stylised geoglyphs originally etched into an arid Peruvian plain more than 2,000 years ago are an enigma. Designs include hummingbirds, monkeys, spiders and human figures, and some of them are more than 1,000 feet (305m) across. They are best admired from the sky.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA

Abandoned Housing Development in Phoenix, Arizona, USA

Holmes Beach on Anna Maria Island in Florida, USA

With its miles of gorgeous white-sand beaches, emerald Gulf waters and abundant sunshine, Holmes Beach is popular with vacationers looking for ‘old-Florida charm’ and the chance to spot dolphins, sting rays and manatees in the crystal-clear sea.
Orchard near Siem Reap, Cambodia

Sand dune in the Namib Desert, Namibia

Salt lakes in China's Shanxi Province

The vibrantly coloured salt lake in Yuncheng, in the north of China's Shanxi Province, is the third largest sodium sulphate inland salt lake in the world. Salt has been mined here for over 4,600 years, with the striking magenta, violet and yellow created by a unique species of micro-algae called Dunaliella salina that creates algal blooms.
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