The Drake Passage, South America to Antarctica            
                            
                This 500-mile strait separating the southern tip of South America and the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica, is at the whim of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which carries a volume of water 600 times larger than the Amazon.                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Neck, The Falkland Islands            
                            
                To reach this privately owned, mile-long isthmus on Saunders Island requires a flight from Stanley in a Britten-Norman Islander, an overnight stay with the Pole-Evans family, and a 12-mile, hour-long ride down a rutted, muddy, jeep track.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Torres del Paine, Chile            
                            
                This 935-square-mile park averages 150,000 visitors per year, which is to say there’s plenty of wide-open space to capture the natural drama: wild weather, intimidating peaks that stretch like fingers to the sky, eerie blue-iced glaciers, and the turquoise water of the Rio Baker.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Lake Clark, Alaska            
                            
                Grizzlies from a boat in this 2.47 million-acre wilderness as they fish from the shore.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Ladakh, India            
                            
                This northwestern region sits higher than 10,000 feet and looks like a barren moonscape.                            
             
    
        
                    
                White Sands, New Mexico            
                            
                The fine particles here are really white gypsum; that’s why the dunes of this 275-square mile desert glow against the sky.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Haida Gwaii, British Columbia            
                            
                Visit the “Galápagos of Canada” to capture sea lions, porpoises, humpback whales, and three species of orcas.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Haleakala National Park, Hawaii            
                            
                With near-zero light pollution and overnight stays allowed (with a camping permit) this national park is amazing for astral shooting.                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Kimberly, Australia            
                            
                This remote landscape has ancient pictographs, bizarre beehive-shaped mountains, and a huge marine park off the coast.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Mongolia            
                            
                Go 50 miles northeast of the capital city of Ulaanbaatar to Gorkhi-Terelj National Park, home to brown bears, 250 bird species, the chilly Terelj River, and a granite behemoth shaped like a turtle.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Antelope Canyon, Arizona            
                            
                This natural Navajo cathedral is an intricate maze through a sandstone slot canyon where, if you time it right, you can capture a ray of sunlight shining through the curved whorls like a beam from a light saber.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Sicily, Italy            
                            
                Almost everything in Italy is photogenic, but Sicily feels especially lost in time.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Havana, Cuba            
                            
                With cigar factories, curbside checker players, outdoor boxing rings, crumbling façades, and ’57 Chevys, this city is a shooter’s dream.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Gray Whales, Baja California, Mexico            
                            
                They’re 52 feet long and weigh 36 tons, and every year in November, more than 10,000 trade Alaska’s Bering Sea for the warm water of Scammon’s Lagoon and Bahia San Ignacio.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Aurora Borealis, Fairbanks, Alaska            
                            
                Within a ring-shaped region around the North Pole called the auroral oval, Fairbanks is one of the best places to see the aurora.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Waimea Bay, Oahu, Hawaii            
                            
                30-foot waves break here November through February.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Central Park, New York City            
                            
                This oasis holds 21,500 trees in 31 different families.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Bora Bora, French Polynesia            
                            
                The Society Islands’ Bora Bora has two extinct volcanoes ringed by a turquoise lagoon.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Temples, Bhutan            
                            
                Tiger’s Nest Monastery looks carved out of a cliff.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Tunisia            
                            
                With Mediterranean beaches, Roman ruins, Berbers on horseback, and a peaceful political scene, Tunisia is a less photographed, equally exotic Morocco.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Tikal, Guatemala            
                            
                Tucked into the lush Maya Biosphere Reserve of northern Guatemala, Tikal National Park covers 222 square miles and is the largest remaining site of pre-Columbian civilization.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Museo Subacuático de Arte, Mexico            
                            
                In the warm Caribbean waters between Cancun and Isla Mujeres, Mexico, Jason deCaires Taylor’s sunken “Silent Evolution,” 400 life-size human sculptures, lie 28 feet underwater.                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Ice Hotel, Jukkasjärvi, Sweden            
                            
                Artists from around the world submit room-design concepts.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Grand Bazaar, Istanbul, Turkey            
                            
                Turkey’s largest covered market dates back to 1520 and has 4,000 shops under ornate, grand passageways.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Jetsonorama, Navajo Nation, Arizona            
                            
                On buildings lining U.S. 160 from Kayenta to Tuba City, shoot enormous black-and-white photos that Chip Thomas, an artist and physician who has documented his Navajo friends, has blown up.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Plaza Botero, Medellín, Colombia            
                            
                This square is filled with bronze sculptures by Colombian artist Fernando Botero.                            
             
    
        
                    
                MONA, Hobart, Tasmania            
                            
                The Museum of Old and New Art looks like a post-apocalyptic bunker.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Scotland, Distilleries            
                            
                There is no shortage of whiskey distilleries in Scotland, but the Speyside is home to more than half.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Machu Picchu, Peru            
                            
                Visit the 15th-century site via the Salkantay Trek, on which you’ll see 30 other people per day and capture stunning images of the Andes and, eventually, the ruins.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Car Art Reserve, Nebraska            
                            
                Located in the northwestern region of Nebraska, this outdoor art compound features sculptures created out of vintage American-made automobiles.                            
             
    
        
                    
                State Fair, Minnesota            
                            
                “I look at the State Fair in terms of dawn and dusk. At sunrise every day, it’s kids getting their animals ready to go at the livestock competition. They are the only people up at that time. In the middle of the day when the light gets harsh, I look for interesting things inside. When the light starts to get tamer, I’ll go out and look for what the last light holds. And don’t miss sunset in front of World of Wonders. It’s visually loaded.” —Photographer Joel Sartore                            
             
    
        
                    
                Copacabana Beach, Brazil            
                            
                This 2.5-mile long beach, bookended by Sugarloaf Mountain, is a riot of beauty and color.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Shibuya Crossing, Tokyo, Japan            
                            
                The population density surrounding the world’s busiest street corner is more than 13,000 people per square kilometer.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Kumbh Mela, Allahabad, India            
                            
                In January and February, the world’s largest religious gathering draws 70 million pilgrims.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Cowboys Game, Dallas, Texas            
                            
                Nearly 80,000 football fans attend the average Dallas Cowboys game.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Lei Chau Island, Hong Kong, China            
                            
                The world’s second-most densely populated island houses 86,782 in less than one square mile.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Fireworks, Chicago, Illinois            
                            
                More than a million gather on July 4 to watch the fireworks over the Navy Pier.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Papal Audience, Vatican City            
                            
                Every Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. from spring through autumn, the Pope holds an audience in St. Peter’s Square.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Blue Lagoon, Iceland            
                            
                To capture the largest crowds, visit on a weekend from July 1 to August 10, when the Lagoon is open until 11:30 p.m. and take advantage of the midnight sun.                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Metro, Moscow, Russia            
                            
                Its 194 stations are some of the world’s most beautiful.                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Pillars, Tasmania            
                            
                “There’s so much potential for drama with those steep, dark, foreboding cliffs. The day I shot this photograph it was stormy and I was right out on the end of a peak called the Blade, looking back along the coast. If the wind is blowing in the right direction it’s almost like it can support you, but you wouldn’t want it to drop off at the wrong time or you’ll fall off the cliff.” –Photographer Grant Dixon                            
             
    
        
                    
                The Alps, Switzerland            
                            
                From the top of the 13,661-foot Breithorn, photographers have views to the French, Italian, and Swiss Alps, with the Matterhorn front and center. Summitting isn’t easy, but neither does it require vast expertise.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Maasai Mara, Kenya            
                            
                Two million wildebeests migrate 1,800 miles from Serengeti National Park in Tanzania to the greener pastures of the Maasai Mara National Reserve every year from July through to October.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Day of the Dead, Oaxaca, Mexico            
                            
                Most villages in Mexico pull out all the stops for this late-fall celebration, but few are as rich as the Tlaclolula, Ocotlan, and Etla valleys of Oaxaca.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Ouray Ice Park, Ouray,Colorado            
                            
                More than 200 ice and mixed climbs are located a 15-minute walk from the park entrance.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Masaya Volcano, Nicaragua            
                            
                At this active volcano, little in the way of fencing or security stands between the photographer and the crater.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Grand Canyon, Arizona            
                            
                Ninety percent of visitors see it from the South Rim, but most of this national park is wilderness.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Macau Tower, Macau, China            
                            
                At 765 feet, China’s Macau Tower hosts the world’s highest bungee jump.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Gray Wolves, Yellowstone            
                            
                In winter the Yellowstone Association Institute offers a course on the park’s gray wolves.                            
             
    
        
                    
                Holi Festival, India            
                            
                Use your camera in a housing during this spring Hindu love fest, where revelers sing, dance, and fling dry paint mixed with water at each other.