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Yellowstone

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Executive summary by darmansjah

Yellowstone is home to more geothermal features than any place on Earth.

LIVING COLOR

Colorful, pigmented bacteria rings Yellowstone’s Grand Prismatic Spring, the country’s largest hot spring. The sterile water in the center is a simmering 160F (71C).

ANIMAL AND MINERAL

Wolves, such as this male calling his pups roams Yellowstone in 11 overlapping packs. Mineral terraces form from dissolved limestone that rises through hot springs, solidifying when the water hits the open air.

Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana. The world’s first national park-established in 1872-preserves the continent’s largest supervolcano, the active Yellowstone caldera. Within Yellowstone National Park’s 3,572 square miles (8,992 sq km) of stunning  scenery are at least half of the world’s geothermal features, including more than 300 geysers an more than 10,000 hot springs, fumaroles, and mudpots. The park holds the largest concentration of mammals in the lower 48 states, with grizzly and black bears, gray wolves (restored in 1995), bison, elk, wolverines, and mountain lions. The Old Faithful geyser erupts 17 times a day, propelling thousands of gallons of steaming, pressurized water about 130 feet (40 m) into the air to the oohs, aahs, and gasps of visitors.


The SAHARA

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Executive summary bydarmansjah

A desert roughlythe size of the United States

SAND TO SAND

Sandstone spires reach through Saharan dunes in Chad’s Karnasai Valley. Wind and storms are gradually eroding the rock formations and returning them to sand.

OTHERWORDLDY VISTA

A Tuareg strides across the windblown sands of Tassillin-Ajjer, a plateau in southeast Algeria. Eroded 

NORTH AFRICAIt is the iconic desert, The Sahara is the largest hot desert in the world, covering 3.3 million square miles (8.6 million sq km) of North Africa. Towering golden sand dunes roll aross its midsection. Summer temperatures routinely soar above 120F (49C). The environment was not always so hostile. For several thousand years, from about 8500 B.C. to 5300 B.C., a wetter climate supported savannahs, acacia forests, and even swamps. Giraffes, hippos, and elephants flourished. When drier conditions returned, most of the animals and people moved out. Now, the reverse may be occurring. A more humid climate, possibly the result of global climate change, is bringing greenery back to the fringes.

WALKING IN THE AIR

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Executive summary by darmansjah

SKY The air is thin, but the views are incomparable atop Bolivia’s Mount Sajama (21,463 feet / 6,542 m). The extinct volcano is the country’s highest peak.

BLUE HOLES

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Executive summary bydarmansjah

1,000 blue cavescan be found along the Bahamian shoreline.

THE BAHAMASInland caves flooded by the sea, called blue holes, are unlike any other environment on Earth. Reduced tidal flow results in a sharp stratification of water. A thin lens of fresh water-supplied by rain-tops a denser layer of salt water. The fresh water isolates the salt water from atmospheric oxygen.

Of the more than a thousand blue holes believed to be in the Bahamas, few than 20 percent have been probed. But the few explorers who have ventured there have brought back data that may deepen our understanding of geology, water chemistry, biology, and even astrobiology. By studying bacteria that thrive in these anoxic waters, scientists can postulate about distant oxygen-free planets and moons.

Millennia in the Making
Divers swim up into the Crystal Palace section of Dan’s Cave, a blue hole in Abaco, the Bahamas. The delicate mineral formations in this and other blue holes are thousands of years old.

Indigo Invitation
Dean’s on Long Island, Bahamas, is the deepest known blue hole, dropping 663 feet (202 m). the holes’ azure waters lure divers, such as those exploring North Passage of Stargate, on Andros Island.

Explained by Science

BLUEholes of the BahamasSAWMILL SINKa blue hole is a flooded cavern with an eye to the sky, a sinkhole with a twist its opening, created by a cave-in, leads to a deep void and side passages, filled with seawater. Conditions in this inland blue hole on Abaco island make it ideal for reconstructing the ancient natural history of the Bahamas and can even mirror life on the planet billions of years ago. The cave-in that opened Sawmill Sink as early as 120,000 years ago filled it with a cone of limestone devris.

Water Chemistry AN Inland blue hole’s water is  very still and highly stratified. A lens of fresh water, from rainfall, floats on the denser salt water and isolates it from oxygen in the atmosphere. Brightly colored bacteria thrive where the layers meet. They need light but can’t tolerate oxygen. Other bacteria here produce hydrogen sulfide, which the colored bacteria consume.

Sawmills’s two side passages, each about 2,000 feet (610 m) long, descend as deep as 180 feet (55 m). stalagmites and stalactites grow only when sea level is too low to flood the caves. Some formations merge into massive columns.

Climate Clues Sawed lengthwise to reveal its core, a blue hole stalagmite, 14,5 inches (36,8 cm) tall, holds 36,000 years of climate history. Growing drop by drop an rainwater leaches calcite form limestone, a stalagmite becomes a climate time line. Colors may reflect the rate of formation. Chemical analysis show high levels of iron at five intervals, evidence of dust blown from the Sahara. Their dates match episodes of rapid climate change (from drier to wetter in the Bahamas) previously detected in ice cores and ocean floor sediments.

Blue Moon, Purple Mountain

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Blue Moon, Purple Mountain


Executive summary by darmansjah

Looking as otherworldly as the moon that hangs near it, Mount Fitzoryin Parque Nacional los Glaciares, Argentina, presents a sheer granite face that is one of mountaineering’s greatest challenges.

 

Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy

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Best For: Aesthetically minded skiers who appreciate fine wine
Executive summary by darmansjah
With the dramatic peaks of the Dolomites rising like ruddy cathedrals in every direction, the ski areas around Cortina have been called the most beautiful in the world. Many of the bejeweled visitors here seem to be vying for the same title. The most upscale resort in Italy, Cortina’s car-free Corso Italia is packed with furriers, designer boutiques, and Italians with sunglasses that cost more than most skis. It’s a slice of classic Italy and loads of fun if you want to sample la dolce vita.
The good news is that most people here are more interested in socializing than actually skiing and snowboarding, so the slopes aren’t crowded—at least by European standards. It’s also possible to stay and eat here inexpensively, as long as you steer clear of establishments that require second mortgages to afford. Though mind-meltingly scenic, the skiing itself is inconveniently spread out, making taxi services or a car useful if you want to maximize the area’s potential. There is a free shuttle bus that connects the ski areas with continuous service during the operating hours of the lifts. Beginners and intermediates will have the most fun on the many gorgeous, groomed runs (Socrepes and Mietres are dedicated to children and beginners). If you don’t mind the bus or taxi rides, Dolomiti Superski tickets give access to a network of resorts that reach far beyond Cortina and offer more terrain for advanced skiers.
Ask a Local
Ski instructor and guide Paolo D’Amico was born and raised in Cortina d’Ampezzo and personally guided Sylvester Stallone when he visited to film Cliffhanger. Here are his recommendations.
Best Digs
Budget: Hotel Montana is cheap, in the center of town, and next to the church steeple so you can “hear the bells singing.”
Swank: Hotel de la Poste is where you can really experience the Italian atmosphere.
Best Eats
Cheap: Twenty Euro will get you a meal at Birreria Vienna, Pizzeria-Restorante—about as cheap as it gets in Cortina.
Gourmet: You can see the entire valley from the terrace of Il Meloncino al Camineto.
Best After-Ski Party Spot
Ernest Hemingway’s favorite was the Enoteca Cortina wine bar, where he once got so drunk with an instructor at midday that he was unable to get back in his skis after the break.
Best Rest-Day Activity
Go Italian—spend the day shopping and eating.
Cortina’s Classic Run
The Canalone Staunies is only open in warm weather when the snow conditions are good. It’s so steep and prone to ice that several people have died skiing there. Of course, it’s a major draw because of its beauty and challenge. Many people come to Cortina just to ski this high, steep slope cupped between dozens of thorny Dolomite peaks.

Northern Lights

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Executive summary by darmansjah

The aurora borealis forms a 2,000 mile wide (3,219 km) oval over the North Pole.

ARTIC CIRCLE The northern lights, or aurora borealis, forms in the rolling interior of the sun. the atoms that make up solar gases are transformed into a thin stream of electrically charged particles-protons and electrons. This stream, the solar wind, is both matter ad energy. It continuously erupts from the sun. most of the solar wind sideswipes the Earth’s magnetic shield, but some spirals down toward the planet’s north and south magnetic poles, where it churns the oxygen and nitrogen in the atmosphere. Shades of green, red, bright pink, blue, or violet appear depending on how far from Earth the electrons and nitrogen molecules interact.

An Audience of One

Residents of Alsaka, such as this woman in Anchorage, know that the best time to view the northern lights is during long midwinter nights, when the sun is at “solar maximum”-the period of greatest activity in the solar cycle.


Crested Butte, Colorado

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Best For: Families hoping to raise the next freeskiing world champion

Executive summary by darmansjah

Like its Coloradosiblings Aspen and Telluride, Crested Butte is a remote, high-elevation former mining town of historic buildings surrounded by spectacular scenery. Crested Butte, though, has a different, more counterculture character than its glossy counterparts—it’s funkier, saltier, more altimeter watch than Rolex. There are restaurants in back-alley log cabins and buildings sided with old license plates, and the free shuttle buses to the ski area are wildly painted by local artists. There are currently no chain stores, and with a population of only 1,487, shopping options may be limited. But that’s the point. You don’t come here to shop or be seen, you come here to ski and to revel in the surrounding Elk Mountains and one of the most eclectic, adventurous playgrounds in the Rockies.

Crested Butte Mountain Resort is three miles up the road, and the base village, part of the town of Mt. Crested Butte, offers conveniently located hotels and condo blocks. There are plenty of dedicated beginner and kid-friendly terrain on the lower mountain, as well as a reasonable collection of blue groomers mid-mountain, but it’s the expert skiing and hiking terrain on the North Face, Teocalli Bowl, and around the peak of Crested Butte mountain itself that give the mountain its cult-like following. Crested Butte pioneered adventure skiing, or running lifts specifically for access to ungroomed, advanced terrain, and the steep, cliff- and couloir-riddled, in-bounds terrain it serves up is as hairy as any in the country. There’s a reason countless extreme skiing and snowboarding competitions have been held here. The ski school also offers powder and steep skiing instruction for intermediates looking to become experts.

Ask a Local 

One of the original female extreme skiers, Wendy Fisher is a former Olympian, seven-year member of the U.S. Ski Team, and two-time World Extreme Skiing champion. A resident of Crested Butte since 1996, she’s currently a ski ambassador for Crested Butte Mountain Resort, where she teaches ski clinics and private lessons. Here are her recommendations.


Best Digs
Budget: Crested Butte International Lodge & Hostel
Swank: The Lodge at Mountaineer Square

Best Eats
Cheap: Teocalli Tamale
Gourmet: Soupçon Bistro

Best After-Ski Party Spot
On the mountain it would be Avalanche Bar & Grill; in town, it’s Talk of the Town

Best Rest-Day Activity
Take a dogsledding tour with Lucky Cat Dog Farm, or learn to drive a Snowcat on a closed course at the resort.

Crested Butte’s Classic Ski Run
“For ungroomed runs I would consider Spellbound to Phoenix off the North Face lift,” says Fisher. “For groomed trails, hands down it’s International.”


PATAGONIA

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Executive summary by darmansjah

Patagonia’s Moreno Glacier covers 100 square miles (259 sq km) and is still growing

The Towers of Patagonia

The granite spires of the Torres del Paine, an Andean massif in southern Patagonia, were shaped by glacial forces and are aptly named for shark’s fins, fortresses, and swords.

A Fox’s – Eye View

Tucked within its tall, a gray fox looks out over the chilly Patagonian scrub. Though sparsely populated, most of Patgonia is privately owned, making wildlife conservation a challenge.

Patagonian Sunrise

Warmed by the light of dawn, ridged clouds cap the massif of Cerro San Lorenzo, the second-highest mountain in the Patagonian Andes. The 12,159-foot (3,707 m) peak is a mountaineering and skiing destination.

ARGENTINA AND CHILE For sheer land’s-end romance, no territory bests Patagonia. Covering 386,000 square miles (one million sq km), this wild plateau has some of the world’s most pristine landscape. Jagged mountains back cobalt lakes. Seemingly endless grassland bend in the wind. Condors soar from the peaks of the Torres del Paine National Park, and rheas and guanacos run on the plains. Whales, penguin, and elephant seals swim off the Atlantic coast. Patagonia’s ancient people, the Tehuelche Indians, were largely displaced by Spanish settlers in the 19th century, and even now the land is sparsely populated. Deserted highways bisect the steppes where an occasional gaucho rides by, evoking a fading world.

REDWODS

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Executive summary by darmansjah

The tallest redwood measures 379.1 feet (115,5m)

CALIFORNIA Much about a redwood is impressive, especially its size (up to 379.1 feet/115.5 m) and life span (up to 2,000 years; its scientific namesempervirens means ‘ living forever’). These magnificent trees once covered two million acres along the Pacific coast of California and Oregon, but their valuable timber was heavily logged in the 19thcentury. This destroyed 96 percent of the old-growth forest. 

Redwoods thrive in a limited range of conditions. They can’t grow directly along the coast because they are vulnerable to salt spray. Yet they must be close enough to the ocean that fog can condense on them on summer nights, providing vial moisture during the dry season.

A Natural Cathedral

Redwoods reach for the sky-and for the life-sustaining moisture of fog-in Praire Creek Redwoods State Park, California. The old-growth trees are part of an international biosphere reserve.

Life at the Top

On average, redwoods can reach heights of 300 feet (91 m). rising even higher is the 365.5 foot (111.4 m) coast redwood, named the National Geographic Society Tree, one of the world’s tallest.

SCULPTED BY THE ELEMENTS

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Executive summaryby darmansjah

LAND Sandstone arches reveal millions of years of geologic history.

The layered sandstone of Delicate Arch, in Utah’s Arches National Park, is a testament to the shaping power of wind, water, and salt. Once covered by oceans, the hardened sediment has been exposed and sculpted for millions of years.

THAT OLD BALI MAGIC

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Word by JAMIE JAMES (is author of several books, among them The Snake Charmer, and is at work on another abut expatriate artists and writers ;  Executive summary by darmansjah

The Indonesian island’s true heart beats in mysterious ways.

The joyous, hectic clangor of a gamelan, the traditional percussion ensemble of Indonesia, startles me awake just after dawn. Outside my bedroom window in Seminyak, one of Bali’s booming beach resorts, a dozen men wearing batik sarongs and headdresses sit cross-legged in the parking lot of the new nightclub across the street, banging on gongs and xylophones. I jump into my jeans and run downstairs. The morning din turns out to be a melaspas, a ceremony unique to Bali that is held to bless the opening of a new building. The gamelan’s brassy notes are intended to drive away any evil influences. Inside, the owner, a Balinese man in his 30s with a lurid crimson-and-cobalt tattoo on his right arm and a real Rolex on his left, gives me a neighborly greeting. “I spent $4,000 on this ceremony,” Gede Wira Apsika says, grinning confidently. “I am Balinese. I know that investing in a good melaspas will bring my club success.”

Towers of star fruit and oranges and frangipani blossoms-offerings to the gods-crowd the dance floor, along with curlicued sculptures made from carved pork rinds. Incense smokes in front of a state-of-the-art sound system.

The pedanda, the high priest, arrives in a vintage black Mercedes sedan with tinted windows. Wearing a long white robe and a black velvet crown embroidered in gold, he ascends the canopied platform erected for him in the parking lot and begins chanting. An acolyteties a duck and a chicken to a post; their flapping and squawking will end at sundown, when the pedandaslits their throats at the climax of the ritual.

Passing tourists pause to gawk as masked dancers enact ancient legends of princes, and dragons, alternating with a pair of beef drag artists and their bawdy version of a stately dance usually performed by young girls. The visitors may not realize it, but serendipity has brought the ma glimpse into the true heart of Bali: the pervasive magic rituals and beliefs of this intensely colorful Balinese Hindu civilization. Some of the visitors will join tours promising to transport them to the “real Bali,” with performances of classical Balinese dance or excursions into the forest by 4WD vehicles. Yet they will never get closer to Bali’s innermost soul than here in the parking lot of a new honky-tonk in Seminyak.

I moved here 14 years ago, following my Indonesian partner, who wanted to open a restaurant. In those days, the area was still largely agricultural, with outposts of budget tourism amid the coconut groves. My bedroom window looked out on rice fields; on a clear day I could see the island’s volcanoes smolder in the distance. but plot by plot, farmland here gave way to high-rise hotels, swanky restaurants, and chic little shops, built by entrepreneurs who proclaimed their intend to create an Ibiza, a South Beach, in rural Indonesia.

Yet this worldly modernity is just a veneer; Under the skin, Bali’s magical belief system is as muscular as ever. After this sacred yet profane dance show with full gamelan appears at my doorstep, I decide it’s time to dive as deeply as I can into the numinous core of this island of some three million people. 

I BEGIN BY TRAVELING ABOUT AS FAR FROM Seminyak as I can go in both space and time, to the pristine forest of the West Bali National Park. Apart from a two-lane blacktop that cuts through the park and a low-impact resort on the northern seashore, the land is completely undeveloped. It remains just as it was when the island’s distinctive culture emerged thousands of years ago. Comprising 73 square miles rhinos or orangutans as other nature preserves in Indonesia do; the Bali tiger was hunted to extinction by the 1940s. yet herds of docile mouse deer wander the park, and southeast Asian porcrupines and marbled cats abound.
On an early morning horseback ride through the mangroves, accompanied by stocky, stone-faced ketut Sulastra, a park ranger who grew up near here, I see a pair of Bali starlings flutter up fro ma stand of bamboo. This elegant white mynah, beloved emblem of the island, is one of the most critically endangered species on Earth. In the 1990s there wer only about 16 of the birds left, but thanks to  captive breeding programs the population now numbers at least 127. When India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, visited Bali in 1954, he called it the “morning of the world”; traversing what seems like a primordial landscape, I can now feel what he meant.

LIKE MOST INDIGENOUS BELIEFS, Bali’s religion of magic began an animism. At the top of the food chain here is the reticulated pyton, which has been known to gobble up children. When I ask Ketut if we might see a phyton, his cool ranger’s face melts away and he exclaims boyishly, “Oh my god! A few weeks ago I saw a big one, over ten feet long, that had just eaten a monitor lizard almost as big as he was.”
The lizard, in death’s throes, writhed in the python’s belly, ripping first one foreleg and then the other through the snake’s skin. “It was a python with legs-a dragon!” Ketut says. The bizarre chimera collapsed: the monitor lizard dead fro masphyxiation, the python from blood loss-about as primordial as it gets. The story reminds me of the magical transformations common in traditional Indonesian shadow-puppet theater. In the old plays, gods often masquerade as ferocious beasts, only to reveal their true identity at the end of the story.
The only sign of civilization in the park lies a couple of miles inland, at Makam Jayaprana (Jayaprana Mosoleum). Ketut leads the way through a dry streambed rustling with the scoot of small lizards, u a steep, densely wooded trail that winds past a small cave with the image of a python carved into the rock around its mouth. Macaques crash overhead, swinging on vines through the canopy. We emerge at the crest of the hill in a small paved plaza flanked by rustic sheds clad in chicken wire, huble shrines that shelter mossy, weathered monoliths. We buy sport drinks and peanuts from a jolly, toothless woman who runs a refreshment stand for visitors and sit down to catch our breath.

According to Ketut, believers built these shrines after two graves were discovered here and identified as relics of the legendary Prince Jayaprana. Jayaprana was the adopted son of a powerful village ruler who conceived a mad lust for Jayaprana’s bethrothed and ordered his heir to be killed, so he could take her as his own bride. “Jayaprana was murdered in this very place,” Ketut says, aching his eyebrows dramatically. When the young princes died, a heavenly fragrance wafted through the forest and all the animals wept-all but one, a white tiger that leaped on the assassin and killed him. When word of Jayaprana’s death reached his beloved, she killed herself rather than surrender to the wicked king, and she was buried here with her slain lover.

Ketut concludes with the usual caveat of the Indonesian story teller: “I don’t know if it’s true, but that’s what people say.” Some folks obviously believe: inside the largest shrine, its low frame entrance shaded by marigold yellow silk parasols, two women straight from the fields, still wearing soiled work sarongs, purchase incense from the shrine’s wizened pedanda. the women light the sticks, hold them high in clasped fingertips as they chant a mantra, and plant the smoking incense in a pot of sand in front of Jayaprana’s grave.

I ask Ketut to explain. Jayaprana was a mortal man who died centuries ago: Why do people pray at his grave today? The ranger shrugs, as though the answer is obvious, and says, “Bali people pray to him because of his power.” The mojo of the martyred prince is undiminished by the passage of a thousand years, its magic power transmitted directly from an era of courtly legend to the age of social networks and sport drinks.

BALINESE MAGIC REMAINED rooted in the land until the mid-14th century, when a kingdom based in Java, the Majapahit, conquered the island and enforced Hindu orthodoxy and the strict caste system that came with it. A few isolated villages refused to accept the new regime and continued living in the old ways. They are called the Bali Aga, meaning ‘original Balinese’. From the jungles of West Bali I drive down a wide, shady highway, deliciously deserted compared with the jammed roads in Seminyak, to the island’s cool central highlands. My destination is a Bali Aga village called Trunyan. Continuously inhabited for over a millennium, Trunyan is a living connection to the world of Prince Jayaprana.

The village occupies the eastern shore of a deep, placid crescent lake that curves around the base of Mount Batur, an active volcano with several craters. When I surmount the western ridge and catch my first glimpse of Batur, it looks too perfect to be real, like a prize winning science fair volcano, with its gentle southern slope gashed by a flow of black basaltic rock from an eruption in 1968. Driving down the switchback that leads to Trunyan, I pass cows dozing beneath soaring banyan trees, old women in straw hats tending gardens of tomatoes and chilies, and bunches of purple shallots hanging fro mthe eaves of barns. When I reach Trunyan, I meet a shy, plump man in his 40s named Nyoman, who abandons a chess game to show me around.

Trunyan is famous throughout Bali for a monolithic idol, likely more than 1,100 years old, of the village’s guardian deity, known by several names, including Ratu Ged Pancering Jagat. Outsiders aren’t permitted to see the sculpture, but I know someone who did (or claimed to). I intend to try my luck, and ask Nyoman to take me there. We wander through narrow alleys, and busy family compounds where men squat in the shadows repairing fishnets. An elaborately carved basalt gateway admits us to the temple enclosure. A few thatch-roofed pavilions dot the grassy compound, surrounding a tall temple with a seven-tiered roof, the home of Ratu Gede Pancering Jagat.

The temple is padlocked. I blandly ask Nyoman who has the key. His silence is my answer: The Balinese hate to disappoint guests, but I can see in a moment that this is a line not to be crossed. Although I’m disappointed, I realized close contact with the great stone deity might have been even more of a letdown. Magic requires mystery to exert its power. I ask him to describe the statue. He hesitates nervously and finally mumbles, “It is man and woman in one.” That’s all he will say, except that the statue rises 13 feet tall, almost to the roof of the temple. A huge boulder guards the temple’s hobbit-size door. Nyoman says that the rock has a name, but he isn’t allowed to tell me what it is. It turns out that access to the temple is even more restricted than I though. Nyoman says that no one is permitted to enter the temple except adolescent boys who perform a ritual dance as part of a full-moon festival. The coming-of-age rite for the boys doubles as preventive magic for the village.

At dusk Nyoman rows me in his perahu (canoe) to see the local cemetery, a mile along the lakeshore. No rows of stone grave markers here. In Trunyan, rather than being buried or cremated, the dead are exposed to the elements. I spot two corpses laid out under bamboo fencing beneath a fragrant sandalwood tree said to be as old as the village itself. At the tree’s base, cleaned bones and skulls form a neat pile-the community bound in death as closely as it was in life. I find my visit to the land of the dead not gruesome at all. In fact, I feel oddly tranquil. As Nyoman skims his canoe back to the village in the crimson-streaked twilight, I envy Trunyan its stack of bones, its cultural integrity, its cosmic security.

THE FINAL DESTINATIONS ON MY JOURNEY  takes me south to Ubud, where my friend Tjokorda Raka Kerthyasa, head of the ancient court of Ubud, has invited me to attend the cremation of an elderly cousin of his. Ubud has been Bali’s most famous village since the island was ‘discovered’ in the 1930s by the glamorous first wave of world travelers that included Charlie Chaplin, Noel Coward, Cole Porter, Margaret Mead (who shot a documentary film here), and the Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias, who wrote an illustrated 1937 book called Island of Bali, which is still a reliable guide to Balinese culture.

Here, the royal court of Ubud-with its reputation for dazzling pomp and ceremony-has never lost its sway, despite the abolishment of the island’s feudal nobility when Indonesia proclaimed itself a republic in 1945. If Trunyan is Balinese magic at its most primeval, Ubud is the religion’s high baroque, its most elaborate expression. No ritual here is more spectacular than the funeral rites of the royal family; when a multiple royal creamtion was performed five years ago, it made front-page news worldwide.

The mood at the temple grounds is festive, as spirited as a New Orleans jazz funeral. Why not? The deceased lived a long life, blessed with a great progeny. I sit with Tjok Raka, eating fried noodles fro ma buffet. In addition to his aristocratic status in Ubud, Tjok Raka is also a member of Indonesia’s national parliament; no one knows more about the challenges the island face now. Yet he remains serene. “Bali survives,” he says. “We’re performing our rituals, praying and meditating, trying to find wisdom, the balance between the real world and the intangible. Anyone can experience that balance, Westerners the same as Balinese,” He looks me in the eye and adds, “Now you are on the earth of Bali. Even if you leave, Bali will be under your skin.”

Tjok Raka hurries off to supervise the impending ceremony. I ask his son, sitting on my other side, what to expect. Tjok Gde, an accredited homeopathic practitioner, says that today’s event will be modest by comparison with other recent royal cremations-a development he very much approves of. “Every culture reaches a tipping point as it approaches decadence,” he says, “and Bali has reached that point. Prosperity from tourism has accelerated the trend toward bigger and more lavish spectacles, pushing rituals beyond what they were originally intended to be.”

Hundreds of people have gathered in the street around two large constructions. First is an eight-foot-tall black bull made of wood, with gilded horns and harness twinkling with fake gems, which will hold the coffin when it is burned; next is a nine-tiered tower, twice as tall as the bull, painted in scarlet and forest green, flapping with pennants inscribed with magic charms written in classical Ballinese script. The white coffin is loaded into the base of the tower, a marching gamelan begins its bright clatter, and the procession lurches to life. The bull, with Tjok Gde sitting astride it, goes first, followed by the tower, carried by perhaps a hundred men. Tjok Raka stands at the base of the tower, wearing the red sash of mourning and banging a brass gong on his hip to encourage the carriers. The procession hurtles at a headlong pace toward the cremation grounds, nearly trampling tourist who are trying to get good photos.

Living in Bali, you become accustomed to the islanders’ clear-eyed, unsentimental acceptance of death. In Trunyan they do it by keeping thousand-year-old secrets, in Ubud they put on a fabulous public show; both are expression of the indestructible core of magic that keeps the island whole.

As I drive back to Seminyak, descending once more into the coastal heat and heavy traffic, I feel hopeful. My friends in Bali worry about the impact of the tourist boom on the island’s social fabrics and environmental resources, but I’ve seen now how the mystical thread that connects the modern island with its legendary past, delicate yet resilient as the filament of a spider’s web, is spinning into the future.
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The world’s highest reaches

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Executive summary by darmansjah

When I follow the serried multitude of the stars in their circular course, my feet no longer touch the earth.” Ptolemy.

WHENwe raise our eyes from the ground and see the sky-or when we stand high above the world and look down upon the clouds-we feel ourselves lifted to another level of existence. We so clearly belong to the earth that to experience life at the heights is to become something else entirely, less human and more celestial. Even when the sky is frightening it is, quite truly, uplifting.

This may explain, at least in part, why we are awed by and attracted to high places, and also to those plants, animals, and natural features that make their homes in the sky. To see the world’s highest reaches means stepping out of our earthbound skins for a little while. The redwood treeis impressive not just for sheer size or age, but also because it overtops all other living things. The high plateau of Bolivia and the secluded reaches of Machu Picchutake us into a realm few people have known, one of keening winds and huge-winged, soaring birds. Mount Everest, lure and bane of so many a climber, gives humans a God’s-eye view, a perspective they know they were not born to experience. And perhaps the most breathtaking of all, the northern light, take our familiar night sky and make it dance. Suddenly we realize we are just tiny beings on a planet surrounded by crackling energies. Reaching into the heights means entering into a fantasy world where we shed our human forms and briefly know what it is to fly.

Sheer Immensity

A string of climbers makes its way across the sheer sides of the Krakoram Range’s K2 *28,251 feet/8,611 m), the second highest mountain in the world. Known as the Savage Mountain, it is one of the most dangerous destinations on Earth.

The world’s highest reaches

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Executive summary by Darmansjah

Lonely Planet writers have trawled the globe to discover the Ten Best Kerbside Meals you could ever eat. Our countdown tells you where to find them.

Elote, Mexico


Masala Dosa, India

Lobster Roll, Maine, USA.

Jerked Pork, Jamaica & Caribbean Islands

Sabih, Israel

Pho, Vietnam

Churros, Spain

Phat Kaphrao, Thailand

Cicchetti, Venice, Italy

Cornish Pasty, Cornwalk, UK.

TONGARIRO

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Executive summary by darmansjah

BUILT by 250,000 years of volcanism

NEW ZEALAND’s Maori people say their legenday ancestor Ngatoroirangi was caught in a blizzard while exploring the North island. Close to death, he called to his sisters to send him the sacred fire of their homeland. A blazing trail burst forth from under the island as volcanoes. Three of these peaks. Tongariro, Nagurhoe, and Ruapehu (a location for Mordor in the Lord of the Rings films), now form the heart of Tongariro National Park, a natural wonder with spiritual significance for the Maori. The park includes waterfalls, emerald lakes, and misty fern-filled tracks. It provides shelter for native kakas (parrots), kererus (pigeons), and New Zealand’s national symbol, the kiwi.

Volcanic Emeralds

Smoth jewels in a gritty landscape, explosive craters atop Mount Tongariro hold emeralds-green water, curtesy of minerals that leach in from surrounding thermal areas.

On Top of Middle Earth

A skier enjoys the pristine conditions of Mount Ruapehu. One of three andesitic volcanoes that make up Tongariro National Park, Ruapehu is still active, periodically covering the snow with a thick layer of ash.

Standing on Thin Ice

Born on land, polar bears-like this one in the Svalbard archipelago in Norway-spend most of their lives at sea. Like almost all life on Earth, they depend upon the delicate balance between ice and water, now threatened by a changing climate.


VICTORIA FALLS

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VICTORIA FALLS

Executive summary by darmansjah

The largest curtain of falling waterin the world

ZAMBIA AND ZIMBABWEThey were ‘the most wonderful sight I had witnessed in Africa,’ said Scottish explorer David Livingstone. Victoria Falls, which Livingstone named for his queen, were known more aptly by the local people as Mosi oa Tunya, ‘the smoke that thunders.’ Located on the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe, the falls of the Zambezi River are among the world’s largest, spanning more than a mile (nearly 2 km) and dropping 355 feet (108 m)-twice as wide and twice as deep as Niagara Falls. The rainbow-infused cloud that rises from the gorge can be seen 12 miles (20 km) away. Narrow gorges downstream show earlier locations of the lip of the falls, which has been eating away at its basalt basin for thousands of years.

THE Smoke that Thunders In full flood, the Zambesi River drops 132 million gallons (500 million l) of water a minute over the 5,600-foot (1,700 m) span of Victoria Falls, the torrent is then funneled into a series of narrow gorges downstream.

Flipping for the Falls Not quite as risky as it looks, a Zambian man’s somersault drops him into a pool alongside the main cascade of Victoria Falls, 355 feet (108 m) high.

By the end of the 1990s almost 300,000 people were visiting the falls annually, and this was expected to rise to over a million in the next decade. Unlike the game parks, Victoria Falls has more Zimbabwean and Zambian visitors than international tourists; the attraction is accessible by bus and train, and is therefore comparatively inexpensive to reach.

The two countries permit tourists to make day trips from each side and visas can be obtained at the border posts. Costs vary from US$20-US$50. Visitors with single entry visas will need to purchase a visa each time they cross the border. Regular changes in visa regulations mean visitors should check the rules before crossing the border.

A famous feature is the naturally formed Devil's Pool, near the edge of the falls on Livingstone Island on the Zambian side. When the river flow is at a certain level, usually between September and December, a rock barrier forms an eddy with minimal current, allowing adventurous swimmers to splash around in relative safety a few feet from the point where the water cascades over the falls. Occasional deaths have been reported when people have slipped over the rock barrier.

The numbers of visitors to the Zimbabwean side of the falls has historically been much higher than the number visiting the Zambia side, due to the greater development of the visitor facilities there. However, the number of tourists visiting Zimbabwe began to decline in the early 2000s as political tensions between supporters and opponents of president Robert Mugabe increased. In 2006, hotel occupancy on the Zimbabwean side hovered at around 30%, while the Zambian side was at near-capacity, with rates in top hotels reaching US$630 per night.The rapid development has prompted the United Nations to consider revoking the Falls' status as a World Heritage Site.In addition, problems of waste disposal and a lack of effective management of the falls' environment are a concern.
 

WATER

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Executive summary by darmansjahbetween people and water in hi submerged sculptures of human

EARTH’s great storyteller – “water is the driving force of all nature” – Leonardo da Vinci

It’s a water world, our planet, blanketed by an ocean, capped by ice, and carved by rivers and lakes and glaciers. Though it’s all HO, water takes an almost infinite variety of forms and hues. The steaming turquoise pools of Iceland’s Blue Lagoon, trapped in volcanic rock, present an otherworldly vision. Victorian Falls, thundering across a one-mile expanse, embody the sheer massive power of water plus gravity. The gigantic breaking waves of Oahu’s North Shoretell of the power of  storms at sea. And the sheer walls of Norway’s crystalline fjordstand as reminders of the ancient grinding passage of glaciers.

Water captivates us not only with its manifestation but also with the life it nurtures. Around Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, thousands of species make their homes, from dugongs to cuttlefish to poisonous cone shells. Drenched by monsoons, the rain forests of central Borneo are a biologist’s fever dream. They hold pygmy elephants and flying snakes, not to mention the thousands of insects and mosses and lichens that form the base of the pyramid of life here. Kelp forest off California’s coast are forests of the deep, sheltering crabs and sea urchins at their base and rockfish and leopard sharks in their canopies. In some watery environments, we may even find clues to the shape of life on other planets. The blue holesof the Bahamas, for instance, nurture rare bacteria that can live without oxygen.

And as for humans: Though we are drawn to the water, this does not prevent us from polluting it. Sculptor Jason deCaries Taylor has created his own artistic commentary on the relationship between people and water in his submerged sculptures of human for human forms, gradually worn away and colonized by the sea and its creatures.

Falling Free

Long known to locals, Angel Falls became internationally famous in the 1930s after American flier Jimmie Angel crash-landed nearby. The Venezuelan falls, on the Churun River ,drop free of the cliff face for 3,212 feet (979 m), making them the highest in the world.

Blue Lagoon

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Blue Lagoon

Seawater from6,500 feet(1,981 m) below the surfacefeeds into the lagoon.

Executive summaryby darmansjah

ICELANDstraddles the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates are pulling apart. Upwelling magma built the island and heats its vast reservoirs of water, creating a geothermal paradise. First among the country’s many simmering geothermal pools is the Blue Lagoon, a turquoise vision in a black basaltic moonscape. The geothermal spa is fed by seawater 6,500 feet (1,981 m) beneath the surface, where it reaches a searing 464F (240C). capturing silica and other minerals on its way to the surface, it mereges fro mthe ground at a balmy 100F (38C), just right for pampering visitors.

BLUE OASISThe Blue Lagoon’s intense colour comes from a combination of blue-green algae and white silica mud. Visitors often rub the chalky mud into their skin, believing it has healthful properties.

A GEOTHERMAL GIFT A woman relaxes in the blue lagoon’s steamy waters. Averaging 100F (38C) at the edges, and warmer in the center, the lagoon is fed by Iceland’s abundant supply of heated groundwater

Hawai’I Volcanoe

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Hawai’I Volcanoe

Executive summary by darmansjah

Erupting since 1983, Kilauea has added nearly 600 acres (243 ha) to Hawai’I sout shore

Fire at The Water’s Edge

Tourists’ flashlights stripe the foreground as lava and a steam cloud illuminate the background at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Lava from the Hawaiian volcanoes can reach 2100F (1200C)

Keeping an Eye on Pele
An observer monitors the activity at Halemaumau Crater, part of Kilauea’s large summit caldera. The crater periodically explodes with gases, ash, and fragments of volcanic glass known as Pele’s tears and Pele’s hair.

HAWAI’IVolcanoes National Park is varied, changeable, and literally explosive. It s 333,000 acres (135,000 ha) encompass two active volcanoes-Mauna Loa and Kilauea-on the southeast coast of the Big Island of Hawaii. Like the rest of the archipelago, the island formed over a hot spot, an upwelling of magma that repeatedly punched through a drifting tectonic plate. The park’s seven ecological zones, ranging from seacoast to alpine, shelter rare species such as the Nene (Hawaii goose), ‘lo (Hawaiian hawk), and Mauna Loa silverswood plant. But the volcanoes put on the biggest show. Kilauea is the world’s most active volcano, with ongoing eruptions that paint the sky like sunset at midnight.


Kelp Forests

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Executive summary by darmansjah

A giant kelp can live up to seven years

CALIFORNA Layered like terrestrial rain forests ,from their swaying canopies to their shadowed floors, the giant kelp forest of the California coast are among the  world’s richest ecosystems. Cold, nutrient-rich waters feed the underwater forests, which consist mainly of two kinds of brown macroalgae; giant kelp and bull kelp. Each plant is anchored to rock by gripping holdfasts and held upright by gas bladders. They grow prodigiously-giant kelp can gain 18 inches (45 cm) a day-but they need light to do so and thus are not found below about 100 feet (30 m). waving in the coastal currents, kelp forests shelter a variety of sea life, from snails and sea urchins to rockfish, sea otters, seals, and whales.

SAFE HARBOR A harbor seal curls through strands of kelp. Many marine mammals, including whales, sea lions, and sea otters, find prey and take shelter from storms in kelp forests.

A LIGHT in the FORESTIn turquoise light, a diver explore a kelp forest off Anacapa Island, California. Like land plants, giant kelp need light to grow and so are found only in relatively shallow waters.

FLOTATION DEVICESKelp plants would be bottom-crawling vines were it not for their pneumatocystst, gas bladders that hold them upright. Giant kelp have one bladder at the base of each blade; bull kelp have a single pneumatocyst near the top of each plant

Kelp forests are underwater areas with a high density of kelp. They are recognized as one of the most productive and dynamic ecosystems on Earth.Smaller areas of anchored kelp are called kelp beds.

Kelp forests occur worldwide throughout temperate and polar coastal oceans. In 2007, kelp forests were also discovered in tropical waters near Ecuador.

Physically formed by brown macroalgae of the order Laminariales, kelp forests provide a unique three-dimensional habitat for marine organisms and are a source for understanding many ecological processes. Over the last century, they have been the focus of extensive research, particularly in trophic ecology, and continue to provoke important ideas that are relevant beyond this unique ecosystem. For example, kelp forests can influence coastal oceanographic patterns and provide many ecosystem services.

However, the influence of humans has often contributed to kelp forest degradation. Of particular concern are the effects of overfishing nearshore ecosystems, which can release herbivores from their normal population regulation and result in the over-grazing of kelp and other algae. This can rapidly result in transitions to barren landscapes where relatively few species persist. The implementation of marine protected areas (MPAs) is one management strategy useful for addressing such issues since it may limit the impacts of fishing and buffer the ecosystem from additive effects of other environmental stressors
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