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NGORONGORO
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The
Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) covers some 8,300 square
kilometers. It boasts of the finest blend of land scales, wildlife,
people and archeological sites in Africa. It is also a pioneering
experiment in multiple land use. The multiple land use philosophy in
the area is to maintain the co-existence of human and wildlife in
natural tradition setting. Pastoralist, conservation of natural
resource and tourism are the three components that are considered to
be compatible in the area |
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OLDUVAI
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The
archaeological site of Olduvai Gorge is located in the eastern
Serengeti in northern Tanzania within the Ngorongoro Conservation
Area. The gorge is a steep sided 4 to 8- kilometers (30 mile) long
ravine, which forms part of the Great Rift Valley. It is situated on
a series of fault lines which, along with centuries of erosion, has
revealed fossils and remnants of early humankind. Ancient
archaeological site
Cradle of humankind Situated in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area
Forms part of the Great Rift Valley |
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TARANGIRE
NATIONAL PARK
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The park is
located 120km from Arusha south east of Manyara. This park has a
particularly dense wildlife population between June - October. This
national park is home to thousands of elephant, and in the dry
season game congregates along the river having migrated from the
Maasai Mara. This park is symbolized by the Baobab tree, growing in
open acacia woodland. Tarangire is an ornithologists paradise rich
in birds of prey and an incredible diversity of avifauna.
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MANYARA
NATIONAL PARK
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At just 325 square
kilometers Lake Manyara National Park is a relatively small slice of
land, tucked in between the Rift Valley escarpment and the lake
itself.
It is a beautiful
little park, tucked in between the Rift Escarpment and the lake
itself ... much overlooked and under-rated.
Most people tend to
just visit the park for a couple of hours during the middle of the
day, but for those who stay inside the park overnight, either in the
one luxury lodge, Manyara Tree Camp, or at one of the private
campsites, there is a much deeper and worthwhile experience to be
had here. |
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SERENGETI
NATIONAL PARK
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There is a
terrible misunderstanding about the Serengeti Plains, which needs to
be sorted out immediately ... The Serengeti Plains are not famous
because they are incredible endless flat plains, the scale of which
you will not find anywhere else. Actually the plains are quite
small. You can drive right across them along their longest axis in
less than two hours. The Serengeti Plains are famous because of a
unique set of geological and meteorological circumstances that has
caused a certain distinct seasonal pattern of grass growth, which in
turn is the driving force behind a huge annual migration of grazing
animals. |
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ARUSHA
NATIONAL PARK
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One of the most
beautiful parks in Tanzania and located 32 KM from Arusha. Aside
from the abundance of wildlife, fauna and flora there are three
spectacular features; momella lakes, Meru Crater, and the Ngurdoto
Crater. Both Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru can be seen from the
park when the weather is fine. Bird watching, photography, walking
safaris. Antelope of all sorts; buffalo; leopard; hyena; baboon;
colobus monkey; giraffe; rhino; elephant; hippopotamus.
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KILIMANJARO
NATIONAL PARK
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Mount Kilimanjaro
stands on an otherwise featureless part of the East African plateau,
on the Tanzanian side of the Kenya border, side by side with the
smaller Mount Meru. Both mountains are extinct volcanoes, with
Kilimanjaro actually being the agglomeration of three distinct
volcanoes, whose violent creation is geologically associated with
the creation of the Great Rift Valley, 100km to the West.
These two great
mountains create a micro-climate around themselves and the
rain-shadow created to their South and East supplies the beautiful
and superbly fertile land in which the towns of Moshi and Arusha are
situated, full of banana groves and coffee plantations. Mount
Kilimanjaro National Park and Forest Reserve occupy the whole of
Mount Kilimanjaro and its surrounding montane forest.
Kilimanjaro National
Park comprises all of the mountain above the tree line and six
forest corridors that stretch through the montane forest belt.
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OLDONYO
LENGAI |
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Oldonyo Lengai is a
volcano in the Eastern Rift Valley, North Tanzania. Its name means
'Mountain of God' in the language of the Maasai people who inhabit
this area. Oldonyo Lengai is of particular interest to geologists
because it is the world's only active volcano that erupts
natrocarbonatite lava. It is also the only active volcano in this
part of the East African Rift Valley, though there are many older
extinct volcanoes in this region. Oldonyo Lengai rises about 2000
meters above the Rift Valley floor to a height of approximately 2886 metres.
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