25 Of The World's Most Wondrous Underground Structures
There is an entire other world and it's right beneath you.
Published 7 years ago in Wow
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In the northern part of the Lishan Mountains is the tomb of the first emperor to unify China, Emperor Qinshihuang. It’s an incredible find. They started construction in 264 BCE, recruiting workers from all over the country, to work on the underground city and tomb which is full of terracotta warrior statues. It is the largest tomb in Chinese history.
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Built in 1788, the Edinburg Vaults were constructed to house the craftsman and labor elements of the city, allowing local tradesman to work and conduct business. It housed most of the criminal underworld as well. Each level had workshops, taverns, and living spaces. Part of the vaults, however, had a huge design flaw which allowed the upper parts of the city’s run off to drip into the vaults. It also became rife with Irish immigrants fleeing the potato famine which only increased poverty, slums, and prostitution. No one knows when the vaults were closed, but they were rediscovered in the 1980’s.
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Believe it or not, deep within the Grand Canyon is one of the deepest, darkest, and quietest motel rooms on the planet. The motel room is built within cavern walls that are over 65 million years old. It has zero humidity and nothing lives within the cavern. It’s completely furnished with everything one might need.
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Derinkuyu Underground City is an ancient and complex underground city underneath modern-day Turkey. The tunnels are full of dwellings and homes and could house up to 20,000 people if they needed to. The city reaches around 250 feet deep (76 m). No one knows how old it is or what civilization originally built it.
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During World War II, Churchill, his cabinet, and the rest of their staff worked tirelessly to plan and strategize their way to victory. To do it in a safe environment, they created a bunker for their entire operation. Today, the bunker and the war rooms are a museum with many of the original items and objects of the time.
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The Les Catacombes de Paris is an underground labyrinth of tunnels full of skulls stacked on top of each other. They’ve been there since Roman times and are believed to stretch out for at least 200 miles. It’s believed 6 to 7 million former Parisians are buried in the catacombs. And, of course, not all areas of the catacombs are open to the public.
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Built during the Vietnam War by the Viet Cong, the Củ Chi Tunnels are extensive interconnected tunnels that stretch for tens of thousands of miles. The Viet Cong used the tunnels for their guerrilla warfare tactics, and American and South Vietnamese troops would frequently send in troops known as “tunnel rats” to investigate the tunnels.
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Discovered on accident by a local Chinese villager in 1992, the Longyou Grottoes are a series of underground man-made caves. There are a total of 36 caves. They were originally flooded but some are drained and open for tourists. They’re dated back at least 2,000 years. How they were constructed still remains a mystery.
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These caves were discovered in 1887 by English surveyor Fred Mace and local Maori Chief Tane Tinorau. As they navigated the dark caves they discovered that bright luminescent lights hung up on the ceiling. Those lights were glowworms, bioluminescent larvae found all over the caves. Eventually, they found a land entrance, and it’s the same used today for tourists.
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Coober Pedy is an underground city located right in the middle of Australia, thousands of miles away from Australia’s capital city. It started in 1917 as the largest opal operation and progressed into an entire community full of apartments for the workers and their families to escape the unrelenting, scorching heat.
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Wanting to escape his father, Baldassare Forestiere immigrated to the United States in 1901 from Sicily. He purchased 80 acres of land and started digging, creating catacombs after the ancient ones he admired back home. However, instead of them being dark and dreary, there’s plenty of light to grow trees and plants. It became the Forestiere Underground Gardens.