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#interesting It is interesting that in the Arctic, and in the Tropics and in distant Antarctica there are still quite large (Devon, Tetepar) uninhabited islands, on which even in the current crazy time a human foot rarely sets foot. Kilometers of land in the middle of oceans and seas on which people have not yet settled. However, only those islands on which there is no permanent or temporary population, as well as those that are prohibited to visit due to natural or historical reasons can be considered completely uninhabited. And there are many such islands on our planet - about 350 of them. Let's look at the most interesting of them, and also remember real cases when people, by the will of fate, got to these godforsaken patches of land against their will and were forced to survive on their wild shores, sometimes in complete solitude. And let's remember how they managed to do it. Creative Commons License: @FreeStockFootageKdrone video; @rekishino_sekaiOkunasima Island; @SuitTravel - One Night Stay at Rabbit Island in Japan; @hyperdrivehack4274seascape; @blagojklincharski - video of uninhabited islands of Antarctica; @radiancevisiongroup1553 (RadianceVision Group) - video - North Sentinel; @vasiliy69tview from the wheelhouse during a storm; Thanks to: Author and video artist Max Terwindt for amazing views of Socorta Island; Author's channel @cyprus_online for incomparable views of Cyprus; Author and pastry chef-artist @Marangoucake for supporting the channel with all sorts of delicious horseradish treats.