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Lying part way down the country between the Etosha National Park
and Windhoek is Waterberg Plateau. With near-vertical sides, this
domineering sandstone formation towers some 600 feet above the surrounding
landscape. Rainwater filters down through the plateau’s layers of
sandstone until it gets to a slanting layer of mudstone. Here it
forms an aquifer, from which water escapes via an abundance of springs
along the base of the cliff.
The vegetation around these freshwater springs is lush and has
created a habitat, which is the breeding ground of several game
species including white and black rhino, buffalo, sable and roan
antelope. Visitors to the Waterberg Plateau Park may also come across
wild dog, tsessebe, leopard and cheetah.
This region is also a haven for a great number of birds. Its 200
bird species include both Bradfield’s and Monteiro’s hornbills as
well as rockrunners, the black eagle and the rare Ruppell’s parrot.
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