Okavango Delta: Studying Angola�s terra incognita

Boyes presenting in Cape Town PIC: THALEFANG CHARLES
Boyes presenting in Cape Town PIC: THALEFANG CHARLES

In a room full of old professors and young scientists, together with internationally acclaimed explorers in Cape Town (which ironically is also in water dire straits), the critical status of the Okavango Delta is under discussion. If they cannot solve the Angolan southeastern conundrum, this pristine wilderness might cease to exist, Staff Writer THALEFANG CHARLES reports

CAPE TOWN: For years, the southeastern region of Angola, a host to the sources of the Okavango, Zambezi and Kwanza rivers, has been a terra incognita – a mystery to science. It has remained a black hole in the map of biodiversity data because no explorers have dared to access the area due to the raging war in Angola.

The region was practically cut out from Angola and the rest of the world for over three decades due to the civil war. The warring factions put a curtain of landmines to practically block anyone from accessing the area.

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