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Travel review website IgoUgo.com (http:\\www.igougo.com) has compiled a list of the top 10 ghost
towns around the world based on recommendations from its readers. Reuters has not endorsed this
list.
1. Kolmanskop, Namibia
Before you enter this abandoned mining town in the Namib desert, you'll need to stop in nearby
Luderitz for a permit -- a holdover from the days when Kolmanskop was a free-for-all for diamond
hunters. The town was at its heyday in the 1920s but abandoned in 1956. It has since been partly
restored.
Built by Emperor Akbar to be the most beautiful city in the world, it was widely thought this goal
was achieved -- until people realised the city lacked access to water. It was abandoned as the
capital of the Mughal Empire after just 10 years and is today a perfectly preserved 16th-century
town.
Of the Arizona ghost towns, quirky Oatman has to be among IgoUgo members' favourite. It's here
where wild burros roam the streets and $60,000 bills decorate the walls of the local hotel, where,
incidentally, Clark Gable and Carol Lombard spent their wedding night.
A regular stop on Antarctic sailings, Deception Island was a popular place for scientific outposts until
several volcanic eruptions destroyed the bases in the 1960s. Today you can see their remains, plus
swim in hot springs.
Gold was discovered here in 1904, and within 16 years, the town had thrived and fallen into
disrepair. Today the most complete building in town is constructed of 30,000 beer bottles and the
only residents -- besides those in the ghostly Last Supper art piece -- are the slithering, crawling
variety.
6. Arltunga, Australia
A favourite part of this old Outback mining town (and early European settlement) is the "loneliest
pub in the scrub", also known as the Arltunga Hotel. It's an ideal place for lunch or a cold beer
before or after exploring Arltunga which was born out of a gold rush.
A former whaling station, Stromness is even more remote, in a sense, than Deception Island. Get
there by trekking across mountains on the famous route of Sir Ernest Shackleton. The station was
abandoned in 1961, but the relatively posh managers' "Villa at Stromness" has been repaired in
recent years in hopes of providing safe access for the growing number of visitors.
After its population began to dwindle and the few remaining inhabitants could no longer support
themselves, Great Blasket was abandoned in 1953. A combination boat-raft trip takes visitors to
Great Blasket today to hike among wild donkeys, sheep, rabbits, and puffins.
A ghost town with the illustrious distinction of being the birthplace of women's suffrage in the
United States, South Pass City has seen a recent return to semi-glory. Restoration has been done
with such authenticity and attention to detail that every one of the 30 historical buildings,
containing over 30,000 mostly original artefacts, is a delight to enter and explore.