League of Nations World Heritage Sites (1983: Doomsday)

After the League of Nations was formed in 2008, the organization turned its attention towards numerous global matters. Several individuals within the LoN - specifically from founding member states of the ANZC and the United American Republic - were interested in which globally-recognized landmarks had survived the cataclysm of Doomsday.

On February 22, 2009, Luis Romero of the UAR was appointed the head of the LoN/World Census and Reclamation Bureau World Heritage Division (WHD). Its task was to identify, and catalogue, surviving world landmarks on each of the six continents. In this regard, it is the successor to the World Heritage division of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Numerous landmarks have been identified by the WHD, and many are either on the official list or nominated for it. The following list contains both confirmed landmarks and nominated landmarks by continent:

Africa
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Asia (including Middle East)
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Europe
Stonehenge (nominated by the Celtic Alliance)

North America (including the Caribbean, and Hawaii)
Carlsbad Caverns (nominated by Dinetah)

Hawaii Volcanoes Park (nominated by the Free State of Hawaii and the ANZC)

Mammoth Cave (nominated by Kentucky)

Monticello and the University of Virginia-Charlottesville (nominated by the Virginian Republic)

Mount Rushmore (nominated by Lakotah)

Pueblo de Taos (nominated by Mexico and Dinetah)

Redwood National Park (nominated by the MSP)

Smoky Mountains (nominated by East Tennessee)

Yellowstone National Park (nominated by the MSP)

Yosemite National Park (nominated by the Field Expedition)

South America
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Oceania (including the Pacific Ocean islands)
Easter Island