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5 unbelievable facts about Point Nemo, the loneliest place in the world

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 8, 2025, 16:00 IST
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5 unbelievable facts about Point Nemo, the loneliest place in the world

Being out in the wilderness has a new, more intense meaning in Point Nemo in the South Pacific Ocean. Point Nemo is a place so remote that no human has ever been there, only the defunct spacecrafts call it home. Interestingly, the closest people are often astronauts orbiting high above Earth. Point Nemo is officially the farthest spot from any landmass. It feels strange to know that there is such a place on Earth where, forget humans, even the marine life is sparse. And we are using the word ‘sparse’ generously here. From serving as a graveyard for spacecraft to being linked with adventure legend, here are five remarkable facts that make Point Nemo one of Earth’s most mysterious and intriguing locations.

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The Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility

Point Nemo, officially known as the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility, is the spot in the ocean farthest from any landmass. It is located about 2688 km away from the nearest land in any direction, in the South Pacific Ocean. Its coordinates, 48°52.6′S 123°23.6′W, place it roughly between New Zealand, Chile, and Antarctica.

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No human has ever been there

Unlike mountaintops or desert interiors that adventurous explorers have physically visited, no person has ever actually stood at Point Nemo. That’s because it’s not a point of land—it’s a spot in the middle of the ocean, surrounded by thousands of kilometers of open water. The nearest humans to Point Nemo are often astronauts aboard the International Space Station, orbiting about 400 kilometers above Earth — significantly closer than anyone at sea level.

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A spacecraft graveyard

Sounds like science fiction, doesn’t it? Point Nemo, because of its geographical location, is where spacecraft come to die. Meaning, this is where space agencies send their decommissioned satellites and spacecraft. Its extreme isolation poses minimal to no risk to human life or property. Many spacecraft have been guided to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere and crash into this area. No wonder the area is also called “the Spacecraft Cemetery.”

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Almost lifeless waters

The waters surrounding Point Nemo are part of the South Pacific Gyre, one of the most desolate regions in the ocean. Not only is it a long distance away from any land on Earth, it is also cut off from nutrient-rich currents. So what does that mean? No nutrient-rich current means the place with the least biological activities. The marine life here is minimal — mostly microbes that can survive on trace nutrients and bits of drifting debris.

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Inspiration behind the name

Adventure lovers will love this fact. Point Nemo is actually named after Captain Nemo, the fictional submarine commander from Jules Verne’s classic novel “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” (1870). The name somehow fits perfectly. Also, the word ‘Nemo’ means ‘no one’ in Latin. Again, it perfectly fits the lonesome situation of Point Nemo. The farthest point from any land on Earth, Point Nemo is one of the very few places on Earth we don’t know whether we will ever get to go or not.

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