The Yakut mountain ridge Ulakhan-Sis is an upland between the Alazeya and Indigirka rivers. And here, in the middle of the wild tundra, there are amazing, downright fantastic stone sculptures (see the pictures of Sergei Karpukhin, a famous traveler, explorer and photographer).
According to everyone who has been here (and there are few such daredevils), these granite constructions of Ulakhan-Sis suggest that someone built them, perhaps in the distant past it was a stone city, which subsequently time, water and wind turned here into these stone piles, among which streets, houses, and other amazingly bizarre urban architecture are still guessed.
True, scientists argue that there are no man-made structures here and never have been, just these granite blocks were first erected by the deep forces of the Earth, and then natural architects worked on them - water, wind, severe frost and just sudden temperature changes. The very same granite from which this fantastic city is "built" is very malleable for such influences of the forces of nature.
Promotional video: