There are some places in France that everyone knows are worth a visit: the city of Paris, the lavender fields of Provence, the cliffs of the Cote d'Azur.
By Cailey Rizzo, Travel + Leisure
There are some places in France that everyone knows are worth a visit: the city of Paris, the lavender fields of Provence, the cliffs of the Cote d'Azur. But fewer people know about the volcanoes in the center of the country.
[post_ads]The Chaîne des Puys, or volcano chain, in the Rhone-Alpes region of France was granted UNESCO World Heritage status this week.
More than 35 million years ago, in the aftermath of the creation of the Alps, a tectonic rift in Western Europe formed the chain. The last known explosion was in 4,040 B.C. And in its almost 6,000 years of being dormant, the chain has grown into a lush patch of greenery.
Here’s What the Bulletproof Glass Wall Around the Eiffel Tower Actually Looks Like The Eiffel Tower has a new look.The 25-mile-long chain features several dormant volcano structures like cinder cones, lava domes, and explosion craters. According to UNESCO, the chain is “an exceptional illustration of continental break-up – or rifting – which is one of the five major stages of plate tectonics.”
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Inscrit ! Le haut lieu tectonique Chaîne des Puys - faille de Limagne vient de rejoindre la Liste du Patrimoine mondial de l'Humanité ! 1er site naturel inscrit en France hexagonale ! @France_UNESCO #ChaineDesPuys #PuydeDome #TousAmbassadeurs pic.twitter.com/DPQGD9mALw— Chaine des Puys (@chainedespuys) July 2, 2018
The range is the first natural landmark in mainland France to be awarded UNESCO status.
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