Life in ruins: The haunting images of abandoned towns around the world


Little says more about how civilisations once lived than a glimpse into the surviving ruins of the places that they inhabited.

In Grytviken on South Georgia Island, gigantic whale bones and abandoned tanker ships tell the story of a civilization of whalers.



A group of white stucco houses reveals that the whalers had lived in a green valley below the snow-capped mountains on the isolated island located about 1,000 miles east of South America.



In Grytviken on South Georgia, an island about 1,000 miles east of South America, gigantic whale bones and abandoned tanker ships tell the story of civilisation of whalers

Fishermen lived right on the water in a green valley between snow-capped mountains on the isolated island until the 1960s, when the whaling station was closed due to low whale stocks

Now all that remains of the former whaling station is a ghost town, home to the cemetery where explorer Ernest Shackleton is buried (foreground, right), and destination for cruise ships

History says they lived there until the 1960s, when the whaling station was closed due to low whale stocks.

Now all that remains is a ghost town, left to tell the story of its past for decades to come.



Ghost towns exist all across the world, as civilizations have been wiped out by natural disasters or expanded to no longer fit the confines of their former homes. Photographs of many of these towns were compiled by the website, Urban Ghosts , and MailOnline has shared some of them here.



The South American town of Chaiten in Chile was nearly wiped out by a volcano that erupted in 2008, and then the flooding of the Blanco River finished it off.



The South American town of Chaiten in Chile was nearly wiped out by a volcano that erupted in 2008, and then the flooding of the Blanco River finished it off

After the volcano erupted for the first time in 9,000 years, the Chilean government tried to rebuild the town, first about 10km north, and then again in its original location, but the town's future is still unresolved

The desert town of Berlin, Nevada, was once a bustling gold and silver-mining town, employing around 250 workers and their families at its height. But when the precious metals ran out in 1911, the workers moved on

Romagnano al Monte in Italy was the scene of an appalling tragedy in 1980 when it was struck by a massive earthquake that claimed nearly 3,000 lives

Toppled homes and tangled telephone wires remain as some of the few signs that people once lived there.

Some disasters were man-made, such as the tragedy of Oradour-sur-Glane, France. The French village was destroyed when more than 600 of its residents were massacred in 1944 by a German Waffen-SS company.



In the U.S., many towns in the American West saw civilizations come and go during the gold rush, such as Berlin, Nevada.

Still standing in the deserted desert town are the skeletal remains of a early 20th-century car and a wood cabin.

Oradour-sur-Glane, France: The original village was destroyed on 10 June 1944, when 642 of its inhabitants, including women and children, were massacred by a German Waffen-SS company

Oradour-sur-Glane, France: The city is only a shadow of what it once was

Chinguetti, Mauritania: For centuries the city was a principal gathering place for pilgrims of the Maghrib to gather on the way to Mecca

Kayaköy, Fethiye District, Turkey: This city was devastated by an earthquake in 1856 and a major fire in 1885

Bodie, California: This was a booming mining town, achieving notoriety in the 1870s due to its particularly profitable gold ore trade The once-thriving mining town of Bodie, California, was a perfect example of a Wild West town, with shoot-outs and bar-room brawls. But when the gold ran out, the miners moved on, to more profitable states such as Utah and Arizona

Bodie still looks like something from a Clint Eastwood film, with saloon bars and pool tables giving a fascinating insight into how its inhabitants lived

Bodie, California: Bar-room brawls, hold-ups and shoot-outs were regular occurrences but now it just sees day trippers and tour guides

Calico, California: Calico is an abandoned mining town located in the largely arid and mountainous Mojave Desert