Thale Ban National Park

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thale Ban National Park
IUCN Category II (National Park)
Location: Thailand
Nearest city: Satun
Coordinates: 6°28′22″N, 100°8′2″E
Area: 196 km² (76 mi²)
Established: October 27 1980

Thale Ban National Park (Thai: ทะเลบัน) is a forested area south of the Banthat Mountains in Southern Thailand, at the south of Satun Province directly at the boundary to Malaysia. The park was established on 27 October 1980. It covers an area of 196 square kilometres (76 mi²) of Khuan Don and Mueang Satun district.[citation needed]

The nearest town to the park is Satun, approximately 20 miles (32 km) south heading towards Malaysia.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Geography

The park is located around a valley which formed the historic link between Thailand and Malaysia. According to local lore, 300 years ago an earthquake formed the lake in the valley, probably due to a landslide which created a natural dam. Submerged trees found within the lake seem to confirm this story. The limestone hills contain several caves. The highest elevation within the park is Chin Mountain with an elevation of 756 metres (2,480 ft) above sea level.[citation needed]

[edit] Fauna

The park is known to contain 64 mammal species, including the rare Pardofelis marmorata, Tapirus indicus and Capricornis sumatraensis, 282 bird species, most notable many hornbill species, 40 reptile and 20 amphibian species were counted.[citation needed]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

In other languages