Jika anda ingin membuat Film tentang  suasana di planet lain, anda gak usah repot2 membuat/mendekor studio utk  tampilan gambar di Film yg anda buat .... 
Bumi, selain pulau Socotra, menyediakan lanskap-lanskap yg seakan akan mirip dengan lanskap planet yg jauh dari bumi. Dan inilah diantaranya...
Black Rock Desert, Nevada, US
The Black Rock Desert of Nevada is a  rather mystical place, with its brilliantly colored geysers, dry rock  bed and dramatic mountains. So, it’s not too surprising that this place  was chosen as the setting for Burning Man, an annual festival known for  its emphasis on disengaging from reality.
Rio Tinto, Spain 
 The blood red Rio Tinto, a river  originating in the Sierra Morena mountains of Andalusia, Spain, gets its  unusual hue from its high iron content. A site along the river has been  mined for copper, silver, gold and other metals for over 5,000 years.  However strangely beautiful it may be, this river is actually an  environmental disaster due to heavy metal contamination and mine leaks.  Though it’s been on hiatus for 10 years, a recent increase in copper  prices has prompted plans to reopen it in early 2010. 
Dry Valleys, Antarctica 
 It seems strange enough that there are  areas of Antarctica that get almost no snowfall – but the landscape  itself of these ‘Dry Valleys’, located within Victoria Land west of  McMurdo Sound, is like some kind of twisted, desolate film set. Vast  stretches of sand, seal skeletons, rocks eerily sculpted by wind and  steaming ice fumaroles (volcanic gas vents) make this place seem like it  can’t possibly be real.
White Desert, Egypt
 Towering chalk rock formations stand  like gigantic mushrooms in the White Desert, sculpted by the sandstorms  that have whipped through the area for millennia. Located in the Farafra  Oasis of Western Egypt, this bizarre landscape is a popular area for  camping and tourism. 
The Wave, Arizona, US
 Images of The Wave, a sandstone rock  formation in Arizona, often inspire cries of “Photoshopped!” when they  appear online, because they look so incredibly unreal. Strange  undulating forms seem to have been carved into the landscape, creating  what looks like a natural skate park of sorts. Approximately 190 million  years old, The Wave is made of Jurassic-age Navajo Sandstone that  calcified into rock from sand dunes in vertical and horizontal layers.
Spotted Lake, Canada 
 About a mile north of the border  between Washington State and British Columbia, Canada, you’ll find  what’s sure to be the weirdest body of water you’ve ever seen. The  Spotted Lake – known as Klikuk in the indigenous language – divides  itself into a strange patchwork of white, green and yellow pools in the  summertime. The ‘walkways’ in between the pools are actually made up of  salts, titanium, calcium, sulphates and other minerals. Giant’s Causeway, Ireland
 Visitors have been puzzling over the  bizarre hexagonal basalt columns at Giant’s Causeway along the Causeway  Coast of Ireland since the area was first documented in 1693. The  columns, which resemble ancient paving blocks, were originally part of a  volcanic platueau 50 to 60 million years ago.
Blood Pond Hot Spring, Japan 
Literally called “hell” in Japanese,  the Blood Pond Hot Spring in Beppu, Japan certainly doesn’t look too  inviting. High iron content turns the waters a deep, unsettling red, and  the effect is magnified by the steam that rolls off the surface.Vale da Lua, Brazil 
It’s not hard to feel as if you’ve  left the planet Earth when visiting Vale de Lua, Brazil. This ‘valley of  the moon’ is the most-visited area of Chapada dos Veadeiros National  Park, located on the Chapada dos Veadeiros, an ancient plateau thought  to be about 1.8 billion years old. Its rock formations, eroded by the  waters of the San Miguel river, are among the oldest in the world.Cappadocia, Turkey 
The rocky lunar landscape of  Cappadocia, Turkey is truly one-of-a-kind. Tunnels rigged with booby  traps and vast underground cities carved by the Hittites 3,000 years ago  are just a few highlights of this strange place, where houses are  carved into the rock and so-called ‘fairy chimney’ rock formations dot  the volcanic tufa rock land.  This area, located 200 miles south of  Ankara, is claimed by some to have magical magnetic healing powers.Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia 
Driving across the world’s largest salt  flats – Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia – can feel as if you’re about to  disappear into nothingness. The way the sunlight reflects off the vast  expanse of salt makes the sky seem to blend into the landscape.  Alien-like piles of salt piled into cone shapes by workers, waiting to  be collected and processed, enhance the feeling that you’re in a very  unique place. Salar de Uyuni contains about 10 billion tons of salt,  with only about 25,000 tons extracted every year.
Stone Forest, China 
“If you have visited the Yunnan  province of China without seeing the Stone Forest, you’ve wasted your  time”. That old local saying hints at the grandeur of this attraction, a  400-square-kilometer stone wonderland where tall rock formations tower  overhead like trees. The Stone Forest was formed over millennia as the  sea, which once covered the area, gradually retreated, slowly eroding  the bedrock.
Tessellated Pavement, Tasmania 
It may be hard to believe that the  extremely straight, geometric rectangles that form at Eaglehawk Neck on  the Tasman Peninsula of Tasmania aren’t man-made. But, this ‘tessellated  pavement’ is a natural phenomenon – a rare erosional feature formed  when sedimentary rock fractured through stress on the Earth’s crust. As  the rock dries out at low tide, salt crystals form on the surface,  wearing it away and leaving just the joints behind.
Cave of Crystals, Mexico 
 It looks like a microscopic image  of crystals – until you see the tiny little man standing amongst them.  Mexico’s Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals) is home to some of  the world’s largest known natural crystals, measuring as much as 36 feet  long. Geologist Juan Manuel GarcĂa-Ruiz said the crystals have thrived  for millenia in the very unusual environment of the cave, where the  temperature stays around 136 degrees Fahrenheit year-round.
Eisriesenwelt Ice Caves, Austria 
The entrance to the Eisriesenwelt  ice caves in Werfen, Austria, doesn’t look like much – just a hole in  the mountainside. But step inside, and it’s as if you’ve fallen into  another world. The caverns located near the entrance are lined with ice  that gets up to 65 feet thick and are covered in stalactites,  stalagmites, domes, frozen waterfalls and other ice formations.





















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