外国人が "クール" と評した日本の観光スポット20

外国人が“クール”と思っている観光スポットは……。旅行口コミサイト「」がベスト20を発表しました。

外国人が“クール”と思っている日本の観光スポットは……。旅行口コミサイト「トリップアドバイザー」がベスト20を発表しました。

外国人が "クール" と評した日本の観光スポット20
20位 ユニバーサル・スタジオ・ジャパン(01 of20)
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19位 東京タワー(02 of20)
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18位 明治神宮(03 of20)
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17位 お台場(04 of20)
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16位 表参道(05 of20)
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15位 箱根登山電車(06 of20)
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14位 梅田スカイビル・空中庭園展望台(07 of20)
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13位 日本科学未来館(08 of20)
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12位 旭山動物園(09 of20)
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11位 築地市場(10 of20)
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10位 カップヌードルミュージアム(11 of20)
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09位 二条城(12 of20)
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08位 金沢21世紀美術館(13 of20)
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07位 三鷹の森ジブリ美術館(14 of20)
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06位 東京ディズニーシー(15 of20)
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05位 大江戸温泉物語(16 of20)
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04位 伏見稲荷大社(17 of20)
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03位 道頓堀(18 of20)
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02位 海遊館(19 of20)
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01位 原宿竹下通り(20 of20)
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「日本遺産」フォトコンテスト 受賞作品
最優秀賞「田染荘夕景」(01 of04)
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(credit:rockman5)
Lightroom賞第1回「清水寺」(02 of04)
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(credit:Kurozumi)
Lightroom賞第2回「棚田に生きる人」(03 of04)
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(credit:Zwei)
Lightroom賞第3回「湯布院午前5時」(04 of04)
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(credit:dongoros)
10 Dramatic Landscapes
Badlands National Park, South Dakota(01 of10)
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(credit:Alamy)
The Pinnacles, Cervantes, Australia(02 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: )
Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia(03 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: Entropy)
Chocolate Hills, Bohol Island, Philippines(04 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: MrPanyGof)
Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming(05 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: Saperaud)
Mineral Forest, Pamukkale, Turkey(06 of10)
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(credit:Alamy)
The Wave, Arizona(07 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: FaleBot)
Sossusvlei, Namib-Naukluft Park, Namibia, Africa(08 of10)
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(credit:MediaWiki: Opeyre)
Giant's Causeway, Northern Ireland, UK(09 of10)
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(credit:Alamy)
Cano Cristales, Villavicencio, Colombia(10 of10)
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(credit:Flickr CultivArte & COLABORATIONation)
The Earth From Above
Sandy Cay(01 of15)
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This astronaut photograph taken on Nov. 27, 2010, provides a view of tidal flats and channels near Sandy Cay, on the western side of Long Island, and along the eastern margin of the Great Bahama Bank, on the islands of Bahamas. The continuously exposed parts of the island are brown, a result of soil formation and vegetation growth. To the north of Sandy Cay, an off-white tidal flat composed of carbonate sediments is visible; light blue-green regions indicate shallow water on the tidal flat. (credit:NASA / AFP / Getty Images)
Lake Nasser(02 of15)
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Egypt\'s Lake Nasser was photographed in January 2005 from the International Space Station. (credit:NASA)
Sahara Desert(03 of15)
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Tassili n\'Ajjer National Park, part of the Sahara Desert, has a bone-dry climate with scant rainfall, yet it doesn\'t blend in with Saharan dunes. Instead, the rocky plateau rises above the surrounding sand seas. This image from 2000 was made from multiple observations by the Landsat 7 satellite, using a combination of infrared, near-infrared and visible light to better distinguish among the park\'s various rock types. (credit:NASA)
Hydrogen Sulfide and Dust Plumes on Namibia's Coast(04 of15)
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Cloudless skies allowed a clear view of dust and hydrogen sulfide plumes along the coast of Namibia in early August 2010. Multiple dust plumes blow off the coast toward the ocean, most or all of them probably arising from stream beds. Unlike the reddish-tan sands comprising the dunes directly south of the Kuiseb River, the stream-channel sediments are lighter in color. Wind frequently pushes dust plumes seaward along the Namibian coast. (credit:NASA)
Egypt(05 of15)
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The Nile River and its delta look like a brilliant, long-stemmed flower in this astronaut photograph of the southeastern Mediterranean Sea, as seen from the International Space Station on Oct. 28, 2010. The Cairo metropolitan area forms a particularly bright base of the flower. (credit:NASA / AFP / Getty Images)
Islands of Four Mountains(06 of15)
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The snow-capped volcanoes composing the Islands of the Four Mountains in Alaska\'s Aleutian Island chain look suspiciously like alien worlds in this August 2010 image from the ASTER camera aboard NASA\'s orbiting Terra satellite. (credit:NASA)
Aurora Australis(07 of15)
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This NASA image shows the aurora australis observed from the International Space Station on May 29, 2010. This aurora image was taken during a geomagnetic storm that was most likely caused by a coronal mass ejection from the sun on May 24. (credit:NASA / AFP / Getty Images)
Sarychev Volcano(08 of15)
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Astronauts at the International Space Station captured this striking view of the Sarychev volcano on Russia\'s Kuril Islands in an early stage of eruption on June 12, 2009. Sarychev Peak is one of the most active volcanoes in the Kuril Islands chain. (credit:NASA)
Arctic Eclipse(09 of15)
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NASA\'s Terra satellite was rounding the top of the globe -- making its way from the eastern tip of Siberia and across the Arctic Ocean toward northwest Russia -- when it captured this unique view of a total solar eclipse on Aug. 1, 2008. In the area shown in the image, the sun was obscured for about two minutes. As Earth rotated, the shadow moved southeast across the surface. At the same time, the satellite crossed the Arctic with its path nearly perpendicular to the eclipse.\r\n (credit:NASA)
Fargo(10 of15)
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The Advanced Land Imager on NASA\'s Earth Observing-1 satellite shows a snowy blanket over Fargo, N.D., on Dec. 12. (credit:NASA)
Mount Everest(11 of15)
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Astronauts captured this image highlighting the northern entry to Mount Everest from Tibet on Jan. 6. Climbers travel along the East Rongbuk Glacier, shown on the lower left, to camp at the base of Changtse mountain. (credit:NASA / AFP / Getty Images)
Island Beauty(12 of15)
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The south end of Eleuthera Island in the Bahamas shimmers in turquoise waters in this 2002 photo from the International Space Station. (credit:NASA)
Massive Sandstorm(13 of15)
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A massive sandstorm sweeps over Qatar as it races south toward southeastern Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on Feb. 15, 2004. A major upper-level, low-pressure system over southwestern Asia led to a series of storms sweeping through the area. The crew of the International Space Station captured this image with a digital camera using a 50-millimeter lens. (credit:NASA)
Lake Naivasha, Kenya(14 of15)
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Flowers grow year round in sun-drenched Kenya, and nowhere are they more plentiful than Lake Naivasha, shown here. In this view from space, bright white squares mix with fields of green, tan and purple along the shores of the lake. Sunlight glints off the long rows of glass greenhouses, turning them silvery blue and white. Fallow fields are tan and pink, while growing plants turn the ground bright green. Roses, lilies and carnations are the most common flowers grown in the greenhouses and fields scattered around the lake. (credit:GSFC / METI / ERSDAC / JAROS / NASA)
Cumulonimbus Cloud Over Africa(15 of15)
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High above the African continent, tall, dense cumulonimbus clouds, meaning \"cloud heap\" in Latin, are the result of atmospheric instability. The clouds can form alone, in clusters or along a cold front in a squall line. The high energy of these storms is associated with heavy precipitation, lightning, high wind speeds and tornadoes. (credit:NASA)