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Kruger National Park

Kruger National Park is one of the largest game reserve in Africa and one of the Best Tour in South Africa. It covers 19,485 square kilometers (7523 square miles) and extends 360 kilometers (220 miles) from north to south and 65 kilometers (40 miles) from east to west.

To the west and south of the Kruger National Park are the two provinces of South Africa's Limpopo and Mpumalanga. In the north is Zimbabwe, and in the east is Mozambique. Now part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, a peace park that links Kruger National Park with Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and with the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique.

Park is part of the Kruger to Canyons Biosphere, an area designated by the United Nations Educational and Scientific Organization (UNESCO) as an International Human and Biosphere Reserve (the "Biosphere").

And here, you can enjoy the atmosphere of the desert and ferociously safana natural life of South Africa along with many wild animals like the typical African Lion, Cheetah, Deer, antelope, hyena, and many more.




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Table Mountain

Table Mountain is a flat mountain forming a prominent landmark overlooking the city of Cape Town in South Africa, and the flag is displayed in Cape Town and other local government insignia. This is a significant tourist attraction, with many visitors using the cableway or hiking to the top. Mount is part of the Table Mountain National Park.

The main feature of Table Mountain is a plateau level of about 3 kilometers (2 miles) from side to side, edged by cliffs are impressive. Plateau, flanked by Devil Peak to the east and by Lion Head to the west, forming a dramatic backdrop to Cape Town. This broad sweep height of the mountains, together with Signal Hill, forming a natural amphitheater of the City Bowl and Table Bay harbor. The highest point on Table Mountain is towards the eastern end of the plateau and is marked by Maclear Beacon, a stone cairn built in 1865 by Sir Thomas Maclear for trigonometrical survey. It is 1086 meters (3563 feet) above sea level, about 19 meters (62 feet) higher than the cable station at the western end of the plateau.



Table Mountain is probably one of the few natural appearance that is unique in the world, with a view of the mountain with a flat top and unique, the object even this became one of the world's natural wonders candidate.




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Robben Island

Robben Island is an island in Table Bay, 6.9 km west of the coast of Bloubergstrand, Cape Town, South Africa. Robben Island is roughly oval in shape, 3.3 km long north-south, and 1.9 km wide, with an area of 5.07 km². The island is composed of Precambrian metamorphic rocks belonging to the Malmesbury Group. It is of particular note as it was here that past President of South Africa Nelson Mandela and Kgalema Motlanthe, alongside many other political prisoners, spent decades imprisoned during the apartheid era. Among those political prisoners was current South African President Jacob Zuma who was imprisoned there for ten years.

Since the end of the 17th century, Robben Island has been used for the isolation of mainly political prisoners. The Dutch settlers were the first to use Robben Island as a prison. Its first prisoner was probably Harry die strandloper in the mid-17th century. Amongst its early permanent inhabitants were political leaders from various Dutch colonies, including Indonesia. After a failed uprising at Grahamstown in 1819, the fifth of the Xhosa Wars, the British colonial government sentenced African leader Makanda Nxele to life imprisonment on the island . He drowned on the shores of Table Bay after escaping the prison.

The island was also used as a leper colony and animal quarantine station. Starting in 1845 lepers from the Hemel-en-Aarde (heaven and earth) leper colony near Caledon were moved to Robben Island when Hemel-en-Aarde was found unsuitable as a leper colony. Initially this was done on a voluntary basis and the lepers were free to leave the island if they so wished. In April 1891 the cornerstones for 11 new buildings to house lepers were laid. After the introduction of the Leprosy Repression Act in May 1892 admission was no longer voluntary and the movement of the lepers was restricted. Prior to 1892 an average of about 25 lepers a year were admitted to Robben Island, but in 1892 that number rose to 338, and in 1893 a further 250 were admitted.


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