Top 10 in Top 11 most beautiful forests in the world.
The white clay Basin Deadvlei in Namibia appears to be a mammoth by the series of black tree trunks, bare-leaf stems that existed for hundreds of years.
Amid the towering red sand dunes of the Namib-Naukluft Park, Deadvlei is nearly Sossusvlei in a haunting setting. The name Deadvlei means dead marsh. The dry white clay basin is a swamp, surrounded by the highest red sand dunes in the world.
It is believed that the clay pans formed from more than 1,000 years ago, when the river Tsauchab was flooded after heavy rains and created shallow water puddles. In the swamps, camel barberry begins to grow.
However, after about 200 years, climate change, drought occurs in the region. Sand begins to encroach on the area, blocking the Tsaucheb line and water sources flowing into the swamp. There is no water, harsh climate, gradually dying vegetation. However, they do not disappear over time.
Instead of decomposition, the desert sun scorched plants into black bone branches. Drought makes the stem undegradable. The bare-leaf branches stuck hundreds of years between the white clay swamp of black charcoal under the heat of the desert. This is one of the places for you to see the most clear skies on the planet.
Red sand dunes, blue sky causes the dead lagoon scene to appear more fanciful. Thanks to morning fog, salsola shrubs and melons of Nara can still survive, creating a life of barren forests.
To get here, you have to use a dedicated car to cross the dunes high. The Devil of the valley has dragged visitors here to check-in. In it, watching the sunrise (or sunset) on the giant red sand dunes of the Namib desert is the experience you should not ignore.