Do you know where to be lonely and away from the most people on Earth?

This place is also known as the "extreme inaccessibility of the ocean" because it is the point lying on the ocean far from the mainland.

In life, there must be many moments when we feel depressed and just want to be alone. One of the solutions many people choose is to find a quiet place to hide but even if they do so, they still have to interact with people around them.

Picture 1 of Do you know where to be lonely and away from the most people on Earth?
There will surely be a few moments when we feel depressed and just want to be alone.

However, there are some places on Earth called "extremely inaccessible" and if you have "conditions" to visit these places, no one will ever bother you anymore.

"Extreme inaccessibility" are those located on the surface of the Earth with a particularly difficult position to conquer and a great challenge for explorers. In fact, they are not at all a mysterious natural phenomenon, but only geographical locations that are hard to reach in the North, the South, on the continent and at sea.

Picture 2 of Do you know where to be lonely and away from the most people on Earth?
"Extreme inaccessibility" are those located on the surface of the Earth with a particularly difficult position to conquer.

For example, Tristan Da Cunha in the middle of the South Atlantic is the most remote archipelago in the world with a population of only 264 people. The nearest inhabited place is more than 2,000km away from the islands.

Even so, the archipelago has not yet penetrated the Nemo, which has been dubbed the most lonely place on Earth because the nearest human life is 2,688km away. This extremely inaccessible thing is just a point on the ocean, not a land or island where people can live there.

Picture 3 of Do you know where to be lonely and away from the most people on Earth?
Location of Nemo points.

According to Sploid, to get to Nemo point, you will lose at least 15 days from the nearest starting line. The adventurers named this special point after Captain Nemo - a character in the classic science fiction novel "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea" by French writer Jules Verne.

It is because of the distant way to get back to geography, the Nemo point is very rare for people to pass through except for some scientific research activities.