These sites are authentically and unintentionally weird, macabre and mysterious.
Chernobyl Amusement Park: Pripyat, Ukraine
Deserted amusement parks can be creepy enough, but at Chernobyl Amusement Park, in the ghost town of Pripyat, Ukraine, the reason for abandonment makes the place not only creepy, but hazardous.
The 1986 nuclear disaster at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant closed down the plant and caused the evacuation of the entire city, rendering this amusement park useless.
While the people have long since departed, the radiation remains.
Sedlec Ossuary: Czech Republic
The Sedlec Ossuary is a small Roman Catholic chapel in Sedlec, Czech Republic. It also contains the skeletal remains of about 40,000 human beings dispersed throughout the interior in artistically arranged designs.
The most notable creations made of human bones are the chandelier in the center of the room and the coat of arms of the Schwarzenbergs -- the most blue-blooded of Bohemian aristocrats -- on the left.
It's difficult not to let your imagination run wild when pondering the sort of sick mind that conceived of things like a chandelier of human bones.
But the real motive behind it all is quite prosaic: it was simply a matter saving space.
These bones were freely given from the bodies of devout Roman Catholics all over Europe who clamored to be buried here after the Abbot of Sedlec went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1278 and brought back soil from Golgotha where Jesus had supposedly been crucified.
Aokigahara Forest: Mount Fuji, Japan
Aokigahara Forest, at the foot of Mount Fuji in Japan, is a densely wooded forest that's sometimes called the "Sea of Trees" and sometimes called the "suicide forest."
It's become something of a mecca for those who want to take their lives; 54 people committed suicide in Aokigahara Forest in 2010. The denseness of the woods means that it's likely that not all the bodies have been discovered.
The magnetic iron in the soil also renders compasses useless, and the forest itself is uncannily quiet and said to be haunted by angry Japanese spirits.
Akodessewa Fetish Market: Lomé, Togo
As the largest fetish market in the world, Akodessewa Fetish Market in Lomé, Togo is a haven for voodoo practitioners.
By fetish, we're referring to talismans that are used in voodoo healing. Things like crocodile heads, chimpanzee hands, cobras and bones. Lots of bones.
These things (or parts of things) are sold as ingredients to be ground up, mixed with herbs and cooked over a fire. The resulting black powder is rubbed into a cut on the patient's chest, hopefully curing him of whatever brought him there in the first place.
La Isla de las Muñecas: Teshuilo Lake, Mexico
La Isla de las Muñecas, or the Island of the Dolls, is the stunningly morbid creation of a man named Don Julian Santana, who lived as a hermit on an island for some 50 odd years until his death in 2001.
During his time there he amassed an impressively ghastly collection of dismembered, broken dolls and hung them on tree branches around the island, where they hang to this day, like sacrifices.
It looks cruel and disturbing, but the backstory is surprisingly sweet.
Although there are several versions of the legend, they all converge upon the idea that Don Julian dedicated the dolls to the spirit of a little girl who had drowned in the canal.
Whether he communicated with the spirit, or whether the drowned girl had actually existed, are all points of contention.
But Don Julian just wanted to give his ghostly friend some toys to play with.
Battleship Island: Nagasaki, Japan
Hashima Island, also known as Gunkanjima (meaning "Battleship Island" as the island resembles a warship) is a 60,000-square-meter cluster of concrete ruins in the sea by Nagasaki, Japan.
In the 1950s it was the bustling home of thousands of coal mine workers. Hashima Island has been abandoned since 1974 when the coal mines shut down.
There's always something a bit sinister about deserted islands.
Isolation is a double-edged sword; being surrounded by sea might mean an excellent vacation getaway, or getting stranded with no place to run.
A visit to Hashima Island feels like the latter. The dilapidated buildings and abandoned belongings of the former coal miners make this place feel like the most desolate island on Earth.
Although Hashima was entirely closed off until 2009, travelers are now allowed to visit.
Gonjiam Psychiatric Hospital: Gyeonggi, Korea
The story of this abandoned psychiatric hospital reads like a textbook plot of a horror film.
According to local legend, patients started dying mysteriously at the hospital 10 years ago, eventually forcing its closure.
It is now an abandoned, dirty building with only the most disturbing remnants of its former life, such as rusted wire fences and disintegrating examination chairs.
The hospital is famed as one of South Korea's three major haunted sites, the others being the Youngdeok haunted house, roamed by ghosts from the Korean War, and the Neulbom Garden, a former restaurant where it's said that you can still hear the sound of dishes
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