Skip to main content
The Keyword
Explore Kinabalu Park and more UNESCO World Heritage Sites

Explore Kinabalu Park and more UNESCO World Heritage Sites

A mountainscape in Malaysia behind scattered clouds, overlooking a colorful town
Kinabalu Park, Malaysia

The Kinabalu Park Botanical Garden showcases the park’s most significant plant species. Its Rafflesia Conservation Centre is dedicated to the flower of the same name. The world’s largest flower, the Rafflesia, is teetering on the edge of survival.

Kinabalu Park, Malaysia

A close-up of a Rafflesia flower, with big, spotted, red petals, and a gaping center.

The Curonian Spit is located in the southeastern Baltic Sea and is shared by Lithuania and the Russian Federation. This elongated sand dune peninsula measures 98 kilometers long and 0.4-4 kilometers wide, and dates back to prehistoric times.

Curonian Spit, Lithuania

Sunrise view of the Curonian Spit, showing houses along the water.

The Portuguese arrived at the small fishing village of Macao in 1557, having been the first Europeans to land in China in 1513.

The settlement developed with the addition of several Catholic churches and chapels, the locations of which influenced the urban layout.

Historic Centre of Macao, China

Fountain in front of the Cathedral of the Nativity of Our Lady, with cobbled streets and a yellow building, in the Historic Centre of Macao.

Nyungwe National Park is Rwanda's first Natural World Heritage site and is located in the Albertine Rift Ecoregion. With an area of 1,019 square kilometers, it contains part of the largest peat bog in Africa and is home to the country’s largest remaining montane rainforest.

Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda

Aerial view of Nyungwe National Park in Rwanda, showing a green landscape with a river.

Designed by Guatemalan architect Diego José de Porres Esquivel, Nicaragua’s León Cathedral is an eclectic masterpiece which not only blends Baroque and Neoclassical architecture, reflecting the transition between the two eras, but also exhibits Gothic, Renaissance and Mudéjar influences.

León Cathedral, Nicaragua

A view of the cathedral from its roof with windows and domes all in white.

Located at the intersection of three main biogeographic regions (steppe, continental and alpine), Romania’s Buzău Land UNESCO Global Geopark is home to over 77 distinct habitats, some of which are directly influenced by local geological features such as salt, petroleum and mud volcanoes.

Buzău Land UNESCO Global Geopark, Romania

Small, gray mud volcanoes at sunset in Buzău Land, Romania.

Lençóis Maranhenses National Park, Brazil is shaped by nature: 57% of the park consists of white sand dunes, which are formed by strong uni-directional winds, and permanent and temporary freshwater lagoons, which are replenished by rainfall and groundwater fluctuations during the rainy season.

Lençóis Maranhenses National Park, Brazil

Aerial view of Lençóis Maranhenses National Park, featuring white sand dunes and blue lagoons.

The Windsborn Crater Lake in Vulkaneifel UNESCO Global Geopark, Germany, is the only permanently water-filled mountain crater lake north of the Alps. Only rainwater feeds the lake, on the banks of which special vegetation has developed. The crater has a diameter of 300 meters and is 30 meters deep.

Vulkaneifel UNESCO Global Geopark, Germany

A round, and large crater formed lake with blue water, surrounded by a green wall of vegetation, and flat, green lands.

Inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2000, the Ruins of León Viejo, Nicaragua, whose existence did not extend beyond a century, provide a remarkable insight into the early days of the Spanish Empire in Central America and the beginnings of colonial Nicaragua.

Ruins of León Viejo, Nicaragua

Monument to the Indigenous Resistance in León Viejo, Nicaragua, showing a big wooden cross, with a person and an animal at its feet, over a white pedestal.

Let’s stay in touch. Get the latest news from Google in your inbox.

Subscribe