Ball's Pyramid

Island

Ball's Pyramid

Island

1

Australia

Photos

Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by Fanny Schertzer on Wikipedia (Public Domain)
Ball's Pyramid by Jon Clark/CC BY 2.0
Ball's Pyramid by Natalie Tapson on Flickr (Creative Commons)
Ball's Pyramid by Martin7d2 (Creative Commons)
Ball's Pyramid by patrickkavanagh (Creative Commons)
Ball's Pyramid by Wikipedia (Public Domain)
Ball's Pyramid by Peter Halasz on Wikipedia (Creative Commons)
Ball's Pyramid by Wikipedia (Public Domain)
Ball's Pyramid by Toby Hudson on Wikipedia (Creative Commons)
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null
Ball's Pyramid by null

Highlights

The remnants of an ancient volcano, this towering stack features imposing terrain & rare insects.  

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Last updated

Mar 5, 2025

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@atlasobscura

"The remnants of a massive volcano, Ball’s Pyramid juts 1,843 feet out of the Pacific Ocean. It’s one of the surviving above-ground remnants of the once-lost (and recently found) sunken continent of Zealandia. Ball’s Pyramid lies about 23 kilometers east of Lord Howe Island. It rises some 550 meters out of the water and measures about 1,100 meters (3,600 feet) in length and 300 meters (980 feet) across that makes it the tallest volcanic stack in the world. This rocky formation is visible from Mount Gower Track on Lord Howe Island. Discovered in 1788 by Royal Navy Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, hence the name, the barren, rocky spire was thought to be devoid of life until 2001 when a group of scientists discovered what may be the world’s rarest insect.  The Lord Howe Island stick insect (Dryococelus australis) had not been seen alive in over 70 years. Known as “land lobsters” or “walking sausages,” the six-inch-long insects were once common on the neighboring Lord Howe Island, but were assumed to have been eaten into extinction by the black rats introduced to the island when a supply ship ran aground on its shores in 1918. Yet in 2001, the scientists found a colony of the huge Lord Howe Island stick insects living under a single bush, a hundred feet up the otherwise entirely infertile rock. Somehow a few of the wingless insects escaped and managed, by means still unknown, to traverse over 14 miles of open ocean, land on Ball’s Pyramid, and survive there. Just 27 of the insects have been found on the rocky spire. They are currently being bred in captivity." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

16 Tales of the South Pacific
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paulo arceo

Google
Great local cuisine! Locals are a bit weird though cause they are always in costumes depicting half-men half-fish frog people. Looks realistic though 10/10

Leobardo Arias

Google
Incredible and magical place!! A bit long travel but still a good experience.

Johnny Edwards

Google
Food was severely undercooked. The chicken tasted like bugs. Upside, we found hidden treasure in the cove… but I believe that grandpa was cursed in the process.

Kevin Villa

Google
It's a ball and pyramid. If I learned goodlier in chemistry I may be able to understand the two shapes but I just see a rock or something. 12/10

Paul Gomez

Google
Fun but no servo anymore (guess the bugs drove up the prices)

Andy Dayus

Google
Not enough charging stations for the Tesla. Will probably go back tho

Sergi J

Google
Nice but when we arrive the escalators were broken and we have to walk to the top

Harry

Google
Nice scenery but rude staff.