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Fog is a cloud of tiny water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the air that touches the ground. Its density can vary, but it can be thick enough to considerably reduce visibility, sometimes to the point where you can hardly see your hand in front of your face. This common weather phenomenon can wreak havoc on travel plans, but fog can also completely transform the visual aspect of a destination, especially a city where buildings, monuments, and landmarks often take on a surreal and unworldly quality when shrouded in this damp, fine water vapor.
Fog envelops the skyscrapers looming over Hong Kong's Victoria Harbor. The tallest building in Hong Kong is currently the 108-storey International Commerce Centre, which stands 484 m (1,588 ft).
Edinburgh's landmark castle appears all the more romantic in its amethyst glow as the Scottish capital is bathed in a soft mantle of fog as winter draws in.
The equestrian statute of French general Ferdinand Foch lends perspective to the Eiffel Tower, the illumination of which lends the wrought-iron landmark a surreal glow as fog envelops Paris.
Only the tallest of buildings on the Lujiazui Peninsula in Shanghai manage to pierce the fog that's settled over the city's futuristic financial district.
The lower half of Lisbon's Ponte 25 de Abril suspension bridge is obscured by a bank of sea fog settled over the Tagus River. Only Cristo Rei—a mini version of Rio de Janeiro's Christ the Redeemer—escapes its clutches.
The towers of the George Washington Bridge in New York City are lit on a foggy night to mark President's Day as seen from Fort Lee in New Jersey. The annual holiday is celebrated on the third Monday of February to honor all persons who served as presidents of the United States.