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The colorful landscape around Washington State's Dry Falls
The colorful landscape around Washington State's Dry Falls (Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The 10 Best 国产吃瓜黑料s from the New Atlas Obscura Book

Get out and explore the country鈥檚 weirdest sites with help from Atlas Obscura鈥檚 co-founder

Published: 
The colorful landscape around Washtington State's Dry Falls
(Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Since its founding back in 2009, funky-destination arbiter 聽has showcased the odd and usual across the globe.

The website features entries on everything from hair museums to the country鈥檚 biggest (and聽only) unclaimed baggage museum. After seven years in operation, co-founders Dylan Thuras聽and Joshua Foer, with associate editor Ella Morton, are releasing 聽featuring over 600 of their favorite oddities.

For the adventurous, Atlas Obscura聽is goldmine of unusual hiking destinations聽and road trips that wind far, far off the beaten path, says Thuras. Here, with help from Thuras,聽is a collection of the Atlas鈥 best oddball destinations.

Devil鈥檚 Kettle

This spot on Lake Superior鈥檚 rugged north shore, a stone鈥檚 throw from Canada, is one of Thuras鈥櫬爁avorite attractions. About a mile and a quarter down聽聽through Minnesota鈥檚 Judge C. R. Magney聽State Park, the Brule River cascades into a waterfall. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a split waterfall,鈥 Thuras says. 鈥淥ne聽side of the waterfall goes into a river like you expect and the other side disappears into this聽glacial pothole.鈥 Where the water in the pothole goes is a mystery. 鈥淒espite really concerted聽efforts to figure out where the water comes out鈥濃攕cientists have dropped in dye and ping聽pongs to no effect鈥斺渘obody knows where it goes, Thuras says.听

Stiltsville

(Courtesy of Atlas Obscura)

Although Atlas Obscura started with a few hundred entries written by Thuras and Foer, the vast聽majority of entries today are written by volunteer contributors. The Wikipedia model has led to聽over 10,000 published articles online, Thuras says, with a few thousand in the backlog, too.听

Stiltsville, a collection of shacks built on stilts a mile into Biscayne Bay, in Florida, is a treasure trove for聽explorers. The 鈥渃ommunity at sea鈥 was built in 1920s and 鈥30s and served as a den of booze聽and gambling during prohibition. At one time there were 27 structures above the bay, but聽hurricanes have taken their toll鈥攖oday, only seven remain.

Although you have to a permit to dock at Stiltsville, a trip out to the shacks is an easy jaunt for聽.听

Ra Paulette鈥檚 Cave

(Courtesy of Atlas Obscura)

These enticing caves, dug into the New Mexico desert, are an Atlas Obscura classic. For over 25聽years, Ra Paulette, a New Mexico artist, has hand carved 聽and created a series of聽what the Atlas calls 鈥減sychedelic sandstone temples.鈥 The miles of caves, Thuras says, are聽worth the trek. 鈥淭heir locations are kind of secret, but they鈥檙e not locked or anything,鈥 he says.听鈥淚f you hike out you can find them.鈥

Ringing Rocks of Montana

Not too far from Butte lies a particularly interesting pile of stones. The geological formation聽isn鈥檛 much to look at, but when tapped with a metal wrench or pipe, .听Hitting one rock will cause others聽throughout the pile to call out in different timbres or pitches.

鈥淚t is believed that the ringing is a combination of the composition of the rock and the way the聽joining patterns have developed as the rocks have eroded away,鈥 the Atlas notes, 鈥渢hough聽ultimately a concrete scientific explanation has yet to be arrived at.鈥

California City

(Courtesy of Atlas Obscura)

Northeast of Los Angeles, smack in the middle of the desert, is one of the most interesting聽places to mountain bike in the Mojave.

California City was supposed to be a suburban paradise. Its developer figured millions would聽flock to the desert if he built thousands of cheap houses on leafy cul-de-sacs. The聽city鈥檚 founder was so confident, he carved hundreds of miles of streets in a grid and named them all. The city聽never took off, but the location is now a surreal 125 square mile destination鈥攁n entire city聽street system laid out, with a central park, but no houses鈥攆or anyone looking for a particularly聽unusual mountain bike ride.

Fireflies of the Great Smoky Mountains

(Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Two weeks out of the year, the Smoky Mountains are home to one of the Atlas鈥 most聽spellbinding sights. Each June, swarms of fireflies light up the park with a synchronized display聽of flashing lights. Per the Atlas, 鈥淭hese bugs start up in mid-June at 10 p.m. nightly. They聽exhibit six seconds of total darkness; then in perfect sync six more seconds.鈥

The NPS has聽and even runs a nightly shuttle during the show.

Blythe Intaglios

The geoglyths of Peru鈥攖he famed 鈥攎ay get more attention, but California has its聽own collection of gigantic drawings carved into the earth.

国产吃瓜黑料 Blythe, in the Colorado desert, are the Blythe Intaglios, a collection of enormous聽figurines scraped from the clay. The largest figure is 171 feet long and can only be truly appreciated聽from the air. Their origins aren't聽known;聽scientists estimate they may date back 3,000 years.

The Atlas is so vast, and filled with so many far flung entries, that Thuras says聽it鈥檚 impossible to see them all. 鈥淭he percentage I visit is a tiny fraction, but I try to get to as聽many as I can when I鈥檓 traveling,鈥 he says.

Horsetail Fall鈥檚 Fire Fall

(Alamy)

One of the nicest jaunts in the Atlas is also one of the most rewarding. For a few hours a day聽during the last two weeks of February, Horsetail Falls in Yosemite appears to catch fire. You can聽catch the sight, a trick of the setting sun over El聽Capitan, in the valley like most of the other聽photographers who pile into the park, but the Atlas suggests hiking away from the picnic area聽for unique, uncrowded viewing.

Dry Falls

In Central Washington, far from the lush forests of the coast, is the 鈥済reatest waterfall that ever聽existed.鈥 The falls, three times the size of Niagara, would be a wonder of the world鈥攊f water聽still flowed down it.

Today, is a vast landscape of groundwater-fed lakes and a habitat for unique wildlife.听There are 15 miles of trails throughout and above the canyon, and campsites, too.

Hamilton Pool

(Alamy Stock Photo)

Thuras and Foer never expected Atlas Obscura to take off the way it has. 鈥淲e went into this聽without a business plan,鈥 Thuras says. 鈥淚t was a passion project.鈥

The Hamilton Pool is classic Obscura. It鈥檚 accessible鈥攖he pool鈥檚 23 miles outside Austin鈥攂ut it聽feels worlds away from normal. Over the centuries, an underground river has carved away at聽the limestone beneath Texas鈥 hill country, leading to this freshwater oasis. The pool, which is聽often ringed with waterfalls, features a small beach and a cavern for exploring, too.

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