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    1. Lake Natron in northern
      Tanzania has a pH of up to 10.5 and temperatures reaching
      60°C (140°F). Its highly caustic, soda-rich waters act as a natural preservative.
      When
      birds and bats die in or near the water, the extreme salinity and minerals calcify their bodies, encasing them in stone-like husks.

    2. WILDMONSTERSHERE on

      So they died upright perched on branches? I cant even sleep without a fan on.

    3. DeliciousPoetryMan on

      Honestly, the ones on the branches look like AI, how do they even get calcified but still remain there

    4. richrichey1 on

      For the love of God, someone fix OP’s headline before crazy pet lovers take this place over.

    5. Green_Wave6070 on

      Theres a place in knaresborough, UK thats like this. Mother shiptons cave. Although, there it not animals. People hang things like teddy bears and such from the waterfall and over time it turns to stone. If I remember rightly, there is a top hat from the Victorian era still hanging there.

    6. Efficient_Mud_4724 on

      The first photo is one of the most beautiful photos I’ve ever seen.

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