Beautiful Pamukkale, Turkey’s Cotton Castle - Amazing Photos
In Turkish the name literally means  Cotton Castle and it is easy to see why it was given that.  Yet this  geological wonder is also the site of the ancient city of Hierapolis and  over the centuries the two have seemed to come together, merged almost,  in to one. In fact some of the old tombs in the city's necropolis have  beome part of landscape - literally.
The site itself is a series of  travertines and hot springs.  The travertines here have a concentric  appearance and are almost sheer white giving the area an ethereal, other  worldly appearance.  The hot springs precipitate calcium carbonate at  their mouths and produce the strange almost organic looking structures.
Before the area was declared a World  Heritage Site it had its fair share of troubles.  Vehicles were allowed  up and down the hills and hotels were built on top of the remains of  Hierapolis.  Today the vehicles are prohibited and the hotels long since  demolished, leaving the area to recover.  People are allowed to bathe  in the travertine pools but are not allowed to wear shoes as these may  damage the deposits.
The travertine pools are at the top of  a cliff which looks like, from a distance, that it is made from chalk  or has been whitewashed by some giant Turkish Tom Sawyer doing his  chores.
The site is home to not one but  seventeen hot water springs which have varied temperatures from lukewarm  to boiling hot.  Transported over several hundred meters the water is  then deposited in to the travertine terraces.  The calcium carbonate is  first deposited as a soft jell which eventually hardens (hence the ban  on footwear) and then becomes part of the structure of the travertine.
One of the more bizarre spectacles at  Pamukkale is the site of ancient buildings which have been half buried  by calcium carbonate deposits over the millennia. Hierapolis was a Greek  speaking spa town, very popular with the wealthy of the ancient world  for centuries.  In fact the city was not fully abandoned until late in  the fourteenth century.
Although now abandoned as an inhabited  city, Pamukkale receive many visitors each year to partake of the  spring waters and for the almost blinding natural beauty of the place.   The travertines, formed as the water has cascaded over the cliff face of  the site 12 miles north of Denizli, are really something special.
This place is extraordinary by virtue  of its outstanding natural phenomena - balmy, profoundly mineralized  water elegantly cascading from springs and creating pools and terraces  which are visually spectacular. It is little wonder that Hierapolis, an  extraordinary illustration of a Greco-Roman thermal installation, was  founded. 
There is a local legend which to  our ears does not sound terribly politically correct.  A local girl was  so ugly that no one wanted to marry her and she decided to commit  suicide.  She threw herself in to one of the natural pools at Pamukkale  and was transformed in to a ravishing beauty.  Naturally a passing noble  man decided to marry her and they lived happily ever after.  No  Shrek-like musings on the nature of beauty here.
 
 
 
 















