10 incredible places that humans have destroyed
Incredible places man has destroyed

The Chacaltaya Glacier, Bolivia

The Chacaltaya Glacier, Bolivia

The Chacaltaya Glacier, Bolivia
Palmyra, Syria

Palmyra, Syria

Palmyra, Syria

The Aral Sea, Uzbekistan

The Aral Sea, Uzbekistan

The Aral Sea, Uzbekistan

In what the BBC called “one of the most dramatic alterations of the Earth’s surface for centuries”, the disappearance of the lake has not only affected fishing communities, but also the general health of the population. The chemicals that were left behind after the water dried up are sometimes picked up by high winds and distributed in reservoirs to make the drinking water unsafe. The barren, arid area is now visited by tourists with their cameras looking for eerie photographs, while locals wish for the return of the waters sometime in the future.
Boeung Kak Lake, Cambodia

Boeung Kak Lake, Cambodia

Boeung Kak Lake, Cambodia

The Buddhas of Bamiyan, Afghanistan

The Buddhas of Bamiyan, Afghanistan

The Buddhas of Bamiyan, Afghanistan

Noh Mul, Belize

Noh Mul, Belize

Pico Bolívar, Venezuela

Pico Bolívar, Venezuela

Pico Bolívar, Venezuela

The Great Barrier Reef, Australia
The Great Barrier Reef, Australia

The reef is so enormous that it can be seen from outer space and is bigger than the United Kingdom, Holland and Switzerland combined. Yet rather than the colourful, healthy, Finding Nemo-esque paradise you might expect, there have been years of disastrous coral bleaching events, which are caused by global warming-induced rises to sea surface temperatures. Recent stats indicate that back-to-back severe bleaching events have affected two-thirds of the reef.
The Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Pavlopetri, Greece

Pavlopetri, Greece

Pavlopetri, Greece

The Lascaux Cave, France

The Lascaux Cave, France
The Lascaux Cave, France
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