WELCOME TO NGORONGORO CRATER
The Ngorongoro Conservation Area covers 8,292 square kilometers.
It is one of the three divisions that comprise Ngorongoro District in
Arusha Region.
This vast protected area stretches from Lake Natron (the
breeding ground for East Africa's flamingos) in the northeast, to Lake
Enyasi in the south, and Lake Manyara to the east. The area includes
the still active Ol-Ndoinyo Lengai (meaning "Mountain of God" in Maa,
the language of the Masaai) volcano (which last erupted in 2007.
Olduvai Gorge and the Ngorongoro Crater, the largest unbroken caldera
in the world. It has been described as one of the great natural wonders
of the world. Eight million years ago, the Ngorongoro Crater was an
active volcano but its cone collapsed, forming the crater that is 610
meters deep, 20 kilometres in diameter, and covers an area of 311 sq.
km. Spectacular as it is, the crater accounts for just a tenth of the
Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
The crater is home to many
species of wild game and birds. With the exception of impala and topi
(due to fierce competition with the wildebeest) and the giraffe
(because there is not much to eat at tree level), almost every species
of African plains mammal lives in the crater, including the endangered
black rhino, and the densest population of predators in Africa. A
strange thing is that the crater elephants are mainly bulls. The
birdlife, which includes the flamingo, is mainly seasonal, and is also
affected by the ratio of soda to fresh water in Lake Magadi on the
crater floor.
In the northern,
remote area of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area are the Olmoti and
Empaakai craters, Lake Natron and Oldoinyo Lengai.
The
mysterious Engakura Ruins, the remains of a terraced city and a complex
irrigation system, lie on the Eastern side of Empakaai Crater. Their
origins are a mystery as there is no tradition of stone building in
this part of Africa.
Views from the rim of the crater are sensational. On the crater floor,
grassland blends into swamps, lakes, rivers, woodland and mountains.
You can descend to the floor of the crater in a four-wheel drive
vehicle. Only 4WD vehicles are allowed into the crater and game rangers
are compulsory for all.
The Masai are permitted to water
their cattle at the permanent lake and can be seen leading their animals
in and out of the crater.
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