From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ankarana Special Reserve |
IUCN Category IV (Habitat/Species Management Area) |
Location of Ankarana Reserve
|
Location |
Northern Madagascar |
Nearest city |
Antsiranana (Diego Suarez) |
Coordinates |
13°4′22″S 48°54′53″E / -13.07278, 48.91472 |
Area |
182 km² |
Established |
1956 |
Visitors |
approx. 6000 (in 2005) |
Governing body |
Parcs Nationaux Madagascar - ANGAP |
|
Ankarana Reserve is a small vegetated plateau in northern Madagascar with elevations that exceed 1220 meters (4000 feet) above sea level. It is composed of 150-million-year-old limestone.[1] With an average annual rainfall of 1,800 millimeters (70 inches),[1] the underlying rocks are susceptible to erosion, thereby producing caves and underground streams—a karst topography. The rugged relief and the dense vegetation have helped protect the region from human intrusion.
Ankarana Plateau, showing
tsingy.
The plateau slopes gently to the east, but on the west it ends abrubtly in the "Wall of Ankarana", a sheer cliff that extends 25 km (15 miles) north to south, and rises as high as 280 m (920 feet).[1] To the south, the limestone mass breaks up into separate spires known as tower karst. In the center of the plateau, eons of rainfall have dissolved the limestone away in deep gorges, and sometimes redeposited it in ribbons of flowstone. In places where the chalky upper layers have been completely eroded, the harder base rock has been etched into channels and ridges known as tsingy.[1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References