1. Tristan da Cunha -Tristan da Cunha
Isolated People

This is an island formed by a volcano. This island, which was a British colony, is now governed independently. About 262 people live in these several islands, the total area of which is only 207 square kilometers. You have to cross the sea about 2000 km from this island to the next nearest settlement. People live only on the big island of these small islands, which are 2400 km from South Africa and 3360 km from South America. To sail to the island of Tristan da Cunha, one must cross the sea for about seven days at times. There are no restaurants, hotels or airports on this island, but there are a group of tourists who enjoy the adventure.

 

2. Motuo, Tibet – Motuo, Tibet
Isolated People

The Brahmaputra River, which flows from China through India and falls into the sea, is a river as wide as 32 km in some places. The Brahmaputra River is the largest river in South Asia. About 10,000 Motuo people live on the Sino-Indian border of the Brahmaputra River in 30,500 square kilometers. In order to see these people, the travelers have to walk through the gorges for four days.

 

 

3. Ittoqqortoormii, Greenland – Ittoqqortoormii GreenlandIsolated People

Santa Claus, who comes with a smiling face riding in a cart powered by a reindeer, starts appearing in front of the shops in our country during December. In this way, around 450 families of these people live on the east coast of Greenland in Arctic Greenland, which makes traveling easier with dog-drawn carts. It is a fertile land of coastal seals, polar bears and arctic wolves. The site is accessible by helicopter from Nerlerit Inaat, the next closest land mass.

 

 

4. Alert Nunavut, Canada -Alert Nunavut
Isolated People

About 800 km from the North Pole, this place is considered to be the highest settlement in the North Pole. At this place, during winter, the sun rises for 24 hours and it is dark like night for twenty-four hours. The alert temperature in February ranges from -33.2 to -50 degrees Celsius. This is not really a village or any such settlement. This is a data collection center for meteorological and military functions. Attached to this post, several army personnel are engaged in the work at all times. The nearest weather station is more than 700 km away. The nearest major city is Stockholm, Sweden, 3200 km away.

 

5. Cape York Peninsula, Australia – Cape York, Peninsula

Isolated People
Australia is one of the least densely populated countries in the world. It takes a four-day four-wheel drive to reach Cape York, where the tribes still live. Tourists who love to see wild animals and enjoy dangerous rides flock to Cape York Peninsula.

 

 

6. Easter Island, Chile – Easter Island, Chile
Isolated People

South America is the nearest large landmass to Easter Island, home to an astonishing 900 colossal statues whose makers have yet to be identified. Easter Island, which is a mystery to the world, is located 3700 km away from Chile. The nearest inhabited island is also over 1900 km away. The only way to reach this island is by air. The flight from the nearest airport, Santiago, Chile, to Chile takes 5 minutes. A small island of 163 square kilometers, there is a human settlement of about 3300 people.

 

 

7. Siwa Oasis, Egypt – Siwa Oasis
Isolated People

Alone in the middle of a desert, the Sivan people have to cross at least 305 kilometers across the harsh sand dunes to find the next human habitation. Sivan people have to complete a distance of 550 km to reach their home country of Cairo, Egypt. The people living here have a separate language. Their second language is Arabic. In the months of July and August, the temperature in Sivan rises above 40 degrees Celsius. The province itself is a popular place among tourists seeking to explore the world of Sivan, which has its own Arab culture.

 

There are human habitats that are remote from the normal world, such as villages like Motuo in Tibet in the great mountainous regions of the Himalayas, volcanic islands separated by the seven great oceans, extreme snow fields in the Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere, and small oases isolated in the middle of the desert. Although finding such places is expensive and time-consuming, tourists who want to see things that most people in the world have not seen with their own eyes, find such places despite many difficulties.