They lied to you. Mordor isn’t in Middle-earth.
It’s in the middle of Turkmenistan. In the Karakum Desert.
And it’s been literally on fire for over 50 years.
The “One Ring to Rule Them All” wasn’t forged by Sauron in secret.
It was created—accidentally—by Soviet scientists with a questionable grasp of long-term consequences and a Zippo lighter.
This is not fantasy.
This is Earth. And Earth is on fire.
The Accidental Apocalypse
Picture it: 1971.
A team of Soviet geologists are drilling for natural gas. They drill. They strike gas.
And then… the ground collapses like a bad soufflé.
Behold: a massive crater, 230 feet wide, 100 feet deep—basically Mount Doom’s awkward baby cousin.
Toxic gas starts billowing out. And the scientists, being scientists, said:
“Let’s just light it on fire. It’ll burn out in a few weeks.”
Spoiler alert: it did not.
Those were the most incorrect “last words” in the history of natural gas exploration.
Five Decades Later…
The thing is still burning.
The crater still glows red like Sauron’s eye after a triple shot of espresso.
And now? It’s a tourist attraction.
Yes, you can actually camp nearby. Take selfies. Pretend you’re Frodo.
Post: “Hiking with bae in Mordor ❤️🔥 #NoFilter #JustEternalDamnation”
What’s Inside the Pit?
Endless natural gas feeding the eternal BBQ
A whole “Don’t summon anything here” energy
Occasional scientists rappelling in, like George Kourounis, who literally descended into Hell for soil samples
Possibly the ghost of a Soviet engineer muttering:
“It was only supposed to be temporary…”
Can We Close It?
Turkmenistan’s president has asked for it to be sealed.
Nature replied: “LMAO. No.”
It’s too hot. Too iconic. Too cursed.
Some say it should be declared a Wonder of the Modern Oops.
Others say we should just embrace it. After all, what’s one more pit of eternal fire in 2025?