QUICK FACTS

Name: Avenue of the Baobabs, or Alley of the Baobabs

Location: Menabe, Madagascar

Coordinates: -20.2504, 44.4196

Why it’s incredible: The baobabs are the remnants of a dense forest that once covered Madagascar.

As its name suggests, the Avenue of the Baobabs is a road in Madagascar that’s lined with towering baobab trees. The trees are the remnants of a tropical forest that once sprawled across the island, and in the modern era they are listed as a natural monument by Madagascar’s government.

The Avenue of the Baobabs is made up of endangered Grandidier’s baobabs (Adansonia grandidieri) — one of six endemic baobab species in Madagascar. The trunks of Grandidier’s baobabs typically grow around 80 feet (24 meters) tall and 10 feet (3 m) wide, but the biggest specimen ever recorded was a 98-foot (30 m) giant with a diameter of 36 feet (11 m), according to the plant sciences faculty at the University of California, Davis.

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