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What of the Serengeti?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 September 2009

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Near the northern border of Tanganyika lies the Serengeti National Park—an area of 4,480 square miles and one of the most important nature reserves of the world. It may be considered in three parts: the Western Serengeti, a corridor between the Grumeti and Mbalageti rivers which approaches Lake Victoria but does not quite reach it: the Central Plains: the Crater Highlands, including Ngorongoro.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1956

References

Grant, H. St. J. Report on the Human Habitation of the Serengeti National Park, 1954. Board of Trustees, Tanganyika National Parks, Dar es Salaam.Google Scholar
Petrides, G. A. Report on Kenya's Wild-Life Resource and the National Parks, 1954. The Trustees of the Royal National Parks of Kenya.Google Scholar
Talbot, L. M. Report on a brief visit to the Serengeti National Park, 1950. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, 31 Rue Vautier, Brussels, Belgium.Google Scholar
The White Paper. The Serengeti National Park. Tanganyika Government Sessional Paper No. 1, 1956. Government Printer, Dar es Salaam.Google Scholar
Comments. Comments on the Tanganyika Government's White Paper, “The Serengeti National Park,” 1950. Issued jointly by the Tanganyika and Kenya Wild Life Societies, Arusha and Nairobi.Google Scholar