Illustration depicting the sunken pirate city of Port Royal, Jamaica, showing 17th-century ruins submerged beneath the ocean surface.
The Underground
North America
Jamaica
December 19, 2025
11 minutes

Port Royal: The Vanishing of the World’s Wickedest City

Edward C.

Discover Port Royal, Jamaica—the "wickedest city on Earth" and the heart of Caribbean piracy. Explore how this notorious port became the home of legendary pirates like Henry Morgan and Blackbeard, and how its lawless society shaped the golden age of piracy.

War & Tragedy
Australia & Oceania
December 13, 2025
12 minutes

Bikini Atoll: Paradise Lost to the Atomic Age

Sophia R.

Explore the tragic history of Bikini Atoll, where the U.S. conducted 23 nuclear tests and displaced its people forever. Learn about the devastating impact of Operation Crossroads and Castle Bravo, the broken promises to the Bikinian people, and the environmental legacy that still haunts the Pacific.

The massive mushroom cloud from an atomic bomb test explosion detonating over the lagoon at Bikini Atoll.
Abandoned & Forgotten
Africa
December 10, 2025
12 minutes

Kolmanskop: The Diamond Ghost Town Swallowed by the Namib Desert

Clara M.

In the Namib Desert, a ghost town lies half-buried in dunes. Kolmanskop was once rich with diamonds and decadence — but the desert has reclaimed it, leaving only silence and sand.

Sand-filled hallway inside a crumbling building of Kolmanskop ghost town in the Namib Desert, Namibia.
The Underground
Asia
December 7, 2025
11 minutes

Kabukichō: The Neon Labyrinth and the Shadows of the Yakuza

Edward C.

Step into the Neon Labyrinth. From post-war ashes to the Yakuza’s golden age, discover the gritty history and dangerous allure lurking behind the blinding lights of Kabukichō, Shinjuku.

A low-angle nighttime shot captures a large, illuminated archway sign with red frames and small bulbs surrounding a white panel with orange Japanese characters.
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Explore the world’s most haunting dark tourism destinations - abandoned cities, war ruins, and hidden histories.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Find quick answers to common questions about The Dark Atlas, our stories, and how we explore the world of dark tourism.

What is The Dark Atlas?

The Dark Atlas is a website dedicated to the world's "dark" places. We document locations marked by tragedy, abandonment, or mystery—from famous tourism destinations to remote shipwrecks. We write about them to educate people on the events that happened there, provide historical context, and explain if (and how) it is possible to visit these places today.

What kind of stories does The Dark Atlas cover?

The Dark Atlas shares stories of haunted places, abandoned cities, war ruins, hidden histories, crime underworlds, and dark legends. Each article blends historical fact with atmosphere, creating a guide to the world’s most mysterious sites.

We cover a broad spectrum of the "dark" human experience. This includes:

  • Historical Tragedies: War memorials, battlefields, and sites of conscience.
  • Abandonment: Ghost towns, industrial ruins, and forgotten infrastructure.
  • Natural & Man-Made Disasters: Places like Pompeii or the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
  • The Inaccessible: Places you can learn about but perhaps cannot visit, such as restricted zones or underwater wrecks.

What is dark tourism?

Dark tourism (academically known as Thanatourism) is the practice of visiting locations where significant historical events involving suffering, death, or the macabre have occurred. Unlike leisure tourism, the primary focus here is the location's association with events such as wars, genocides, shipwrecks, or natural disasters, rather than the scenery or entertainment value.

You can read more about these locations in our full guide: What is Dark Tourism?

Why do people visit dark tourism sites?

People are drawn to dark tourism for many reasons: educational purposes, a desire for authentic historical connection, paying respect to past tragedies, exploring abandoned places and Memento Mori (a reminder of one’s own mortality). Visitors often find these experiences deeply moving and life-affirming, as they provide a stark contrast to typical leisure travel.

Is dark tourism ethical?

Yes, when approached with respect and "solemn curiosity". Ethical dark tourism means acknowledging the significance of tragic sites without sensationalizing them.
The key lies in the traveler's intent: Are you there to learn and pay respects, or to take selfies?
The Dark Atlas provides historical context and encourages thoughtful exploration rather than exploitation.

Can I visit every place marked on The Dark Atlas?

Not necessarily. While many locations on our map are established dark tourism sites (museums, memorials), others are documented purely for educational purposes. Some locations, such as certain shipwrecks, protected reserves, or structurally unsafe ruins, are listed to preserve their story, even if physical tourism is not possible or recommended.