North Sentinel Island in India has been home to the Sentinelese tribe for at least 30,000 years, contact with whom is forbidden by law. Photo: Unsplash
Lascaux Caves in France features art dating back 17,000 years, but the public have been banned since 1963. Reuters
Ilha da Queimada Grande (Snake Island) in Brazil is thought to be home to 430,000 snakes, which have overrun the island since it was abandoned in the 1920s.
A king penguin colony on Heard Island and McDonald Islands, Australia, which takes a two-week boat journey from the mainland to reach. Getty Images
Access to Bhangarh Fort in India is strictly forbidden after sunset, amid local folklore that those who go in never come out again. Photo: Deepak Kosta / Unsplash
Surtsey Island off the south coast of Iceland was only formed in the 1960s, with visitors banned to preserve the ecosystem. Getty Images
The derelict remains of Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island in the middle of the East River in New York. Photo: Creative Commons
Pravcicka Brana, Czech Republic, is the largest natural sandstone arch in Europe and was closed to the public in 1982. Getty Images
Niihau Island, Hawaii has been dubbed the “Forbidden Island”. It was bought in 1864 by a Scottish farmer and plantation owner called Elizabeth Sinclair for $10,000. Photo: Studio Kealaula / Unsplash
Ise Grand Shrine in Ise, Japan. Only the Japanese royal family are permitted into the holy building. EPA
North Sentinel Island in India has been home to the Sentinelese tribe for at least 30,000 years, contact with whom is forbidden by law. Photo: Unsplash
Lascaux Caves in France features art dating back 17,000 years, but the public have been banned since 1963. Reuters
Ilha da Queimada Grande (Snake Island) in Brazil is thought to be home to 430,000 snakes, which have overrun the island since it was abandoned in the 1920s.
A king penguin colony on Heard Island and McDonald Islands, Australia, which takes a two-week boat journey from the mainland to reach. Getty Images
Access to Bhangarh Fort in India is strictly forbidden after sunset, amid local folklore that those who go in never come out again. Photo: Deepak Kosta / Unsplash
Surtsey Island off the south coast of Iceland was only formed in the 1960s, with visitors banned to preserve the ecosystem. Getty Images
The derelict remains of Riverside Hospital on North Brother Island in the middle of the East River in New York. Photo: Creative Commons
Pravcicka Brana, Czech Republic, is the largest natural sandstone arch in Europe and was closed to the public in 1982. Getty Images
Niihau Island, Hawaii has been dubbed the “Forbidden Island”. It was bought in 1864 by a Scottish farmer and plantation owner called Elizabeth Sinclair for $10,000. Photo: Studio Kealaula / Unsplash
Ise Grand Shrine in Ise, Japan. Only the Japanese royal family are permitted into the holy building. EPA
North Sentinel Island in India has been home to the Sentinelese tribe for at least 30,000 years, contact with whom is forbidden by law. Photo: Unsplash