Get those goosebumps creeping up your arms again – it's time to delve back into our surreal and mysterious journeys through some of Australia's weirdest, wackiest and yet wonderful sights.

Part one and Part two set the stage for some truly mind-boggling Aussie tourist attractions, and now once again the curtains are opening to showcase a wild world for you to glimpse. 

Babinda Boulders, south of Cairns

While they certainly are beautiful rock pools with crystal waters cascading over the boulders, this place is also known by a far creepier, eerie and sinister name: Devil's Pool.

According to an aboriginal legend, a beautiful young maiden named Oolana fell in love with a man named Dyga from another tribe, although she was married to a respected elder named Waroonoo. Realising that they could never be together if they stayed, the lovers ran away but were captured near these very boulders.

Rather than be dragged apart, Oolana threw herself into the waters in anguish for being taken away from her true love. Legend says her pain turned the waters into a gushing torrent and made the boulders collapse all around her, trapping her spirit in the pools. People visiting the pools say they can still hear her cries as they swim. 

While they certainly are beautiful rock pools with crystal waters cascading over the boulders, this place is also known by a far creepier, eerie and sinister name: Devil's Pool.

The water is surrounded by lush green rainforests and as you swim you can see Queensland's tallest mountain, Mount Bartle Frere nearby, making it a picturesque spot for a visit in its own right. This spooky swimming hole is only a short drive from Cairns

Hallett Cove Conservation Park, Adelaide 

Fancy seeing millions and millions of years into the past? As far back as the Ice Age? Well, take a short 30 minute drive from Adelaide and you can do exactly that. 

The northern cliffs have the best geological records of the Australian Ice Age, dating as far back as 600 million years ago. Around 280 million years ago, scientists believe Australia was part of a larger continent called Gondwana which was buried under an icecap nearly a kilometre thick.

Traces of this ice can be seen along these rocky cliffs, seen in features like chatter marks and crescentic gouges. Walking along this park is like taking a journey back in time!