On the 21st of July was exactly 47 years since people set the foot on the Moon. Such a glorious event can’t pass by unnoticed, as those small steps of Neil Armstrong were the beginning of new stage in astronomy studies. But to see the Moon, you don’t actually need to take a spaceship 384, 400 km above the Earth. You just need to know exactly where to go, as the world holds plenty of destinations that look exactly like the moon surface:
Namibian Desert
Salar de Uyuni salt flats, Bolivia
Lake Natron, Tanzania
Cappadocia, Turkey
Lake Myvatn, Iceland
Valle de la Luna, Chile
Danakil Depression, Ethiopia
Glacial Caves, Iceland
Bardenas Reales Natural Park, Spain
Waiotapu, New Zealand
Canyonlands, National Park, USA
Algerian desert
The Pinnacles, Australia
source: telegraph
featured image:whenonearth