Seven natural wonders of the world set to be unveiled
Sinkholes created by the drying of the Dead Sea, near Kibbutz Ein Gedi. The Dead Sea, Vietnam's Halong Bay and Australia's Great Barrier Reef are among 28 contenders to be crowned among the world's new seven wonders of nature.
The Dead Sea, Vietnam's Halong Bay and Australia's Great Barrier Reef are among 28 contenders to be crowned among the world's new seven wonders of nature on Friday.
Swiss foundation New 7 Wonders of Nature organised a world-wide poll in which anyone in the world could vote via telephone, text messages or Internet social networks for their favourite sites.
Polls closed at 1111 GMT, with preliminary results to be announced at 1907 GMT.
Among finalists announced in July were Switzerland's Matterhorn peak, New Zealand's Milford Sound and the Galapagos Islands.
Five days before voting ended, the 10 sites leading the polls were the Dead Sea, the US' Grand Canyon, the Great Barrier Reef, Halong Bay, Lebanon's Jeita Grotto, South Korea's Jeju Island, Indonesia's Komodo Island, the Philippines' Puerto Princesa Underground River, Bangladesh's Sundarbans mangrove forest and Italy's Mount Vesuvius.
However, the website shows that voting online accelerated on the last polling day for sites like Germany's Black Forest and the Maldives, while others such as the Iguazu Falls, Jeju Island and the Amazon rainforest fell back.
The poll has attracted great interest, mobilising celebrities including Argentinian football star Lionel Messi calling on fans to pick the Iguazu Falls.
The results come after a long consultation process lasting from December 2007 to July 2009, when world citizens were asked to put forward sites which they deemed were natural wonders.
More than a million votes were cast to trim the list of more than 440 contenders in over 220 countries down to a shortlist of 77.
The group was then further cut to the 28 finalists by a panel of experts.
Founded in 2001 by Bernard Weber in Zurich, the foundation New7Wonders is based on the same principle on which the seven ancient wonders of the world were established by Philon de Byzance in ancient Greece.
It aims to create a global memory by garnering participation worldwide.
But even as the natural wonders poll came to a close, the New7Wonders foundation has set its eyes on a new survey -- the top seven cities of the world. Participating cities will be announced on January 1, 2012.
(c) 2011 AFP
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http://en.wikiped...nt_World
Nov 11, 2011
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Nov 11, 2011
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If not... Why not?
She has my vote, even though she refuses to return my calls or answer my persistent knocking at her front door.
Nov 12, 2011
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Nov 12, 2011
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Nov 12, 2011
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In our era..., which one of these holds? Not much, it seems. That is why there was originally a much larger list of candidate places.
So..., yes, it's a silly thing. Any repeat of anything is silly, because by definition it removes any context and presents to the world a two-legged no-feathered beast. It's just that someone has managed to attract a lot of traffic to his website, and right now he is probably selling commercials.
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Nov 15, 2011
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