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The Ngorongoro Crater is a World Heritage Site and probably one of the
most beautiful areas in the world. However, the Crater itself is only 3% of the
total Ngorongoro Conservation Area, which covers 8,280 square km. This vast area
is littered with recently active volcanoes, towering mountains, undulating plains,
rolling sand dunes, forests, rivers, lakes and the world famous Olduvai Gorge
archeological site.
A perfect caldera 18 km across, the Crater remains the main attraction of the
conservation area. Within this one small area, swamps, lakes, rivers, grasslands,
woodlands and forest provide virtually every habitat found in East Africa; in
every habitat, wildlife is found in profusion.
The scenery by itself is magnificent. The ground falls away at your feet,
descending into the deep greens of waving forest branches before opening out to
the flat expanse of open plains at the base of the Crater. Glittering lake waters
reflect the sun. In the distance, the Crater walls rise again.
Grazing animals dominate the Crater, with zebra, wildebeest, gazelle, buffalo,
eland, warthog and hartebeest covering the crater floor. The Crater boasts
the highest concentration of predators in East Africa. Large prides of lion
and packs of hyena are drawn to this bounty; cheetahs are also frequently spotted
at a kill. Leopards lurk in the forests, as do many of the smaller, nocturnal
feline predators, such as the civet, servals, and genets.
The bird life is abundant. Red-eyed doves, Hildebrandt's francolins, turacos,
hornbills and shrikes are found in the forest; the Verreaux eagles and Auger buzzards
soar through the air above. Water birds such as the spoonbill, jacana and widow
birds are often present at the swamps.
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