Meeting Madagascar

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Meeting Madagascar

Larger than California and Oregon combined, Madagascar is the world's fourth largest island, after Greenland, New Guinea and Borneo. Located 250 miles off the south-east coast of Africa, the island extends 1,000 miles in length and 360 miles at its largest width. The island can be divided into three main parts: the East Coast, a narrow coastal strip abutting the steep slopes of the North-South mountain range, home of the rain forest; the Central Highlands, averaging 2500 to 4500 feet in altitude and culminating at 9430 feet, decorated with immense rice fields; and the West Coast, home of the baobabs and thorny forest. Coral reefs fringe a portion of the coast. Most plants and animals found in Madagascar exist only there.

Thirteen million Malagasy inhabit Madagascar. Exactly how and when the early Malagasy discovered and settled the island is not known. They have a dual Indonesian and African origin, attested by their physical features, language, agricultural practices, and customs. In spite of their diversity, they are united by a common language, rooted in the ancient Malayo-Polynesian, ancestor of the tongues spoken in the vast area bounded by Hawaii, the Tuamotu and Madagascar. The modern language has been enriched by words imported from Bantu tongues, Swahili, Arabic, English and French.

Traveling in Madagascar is may not for everybody. The most ancient road is not yet 100 years old and tourism is a very young industry. Many conveniences available and expected in heavily-traveled places like Greece or Japan simply do not exist. If you

Insists on exact schedules, well-planned itineraries and plush accommodations, if you want to be able to hop on the next plane or place an urgent long-distance phone c...

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...ages only turn on the electricity on average about four hours a day. Last but certainly not least Travel very light.

Bibliography:

Work Cited Page

Magazines

January 1996: Atlantic Monthly -- Otherworldly Madagascar, by Peter Tyson

Guide books

Bradt, Hilary: Guide to Madagascar

June 1992. 262 pages with photographs and maps; 50 or so pages at the beginning deal with facts and figures, history, climate, people, fauna and flora.

General books

Andriamirado, Sennen: Madagascar Today

Grijelmo, Spain, 1978.

Bradt, Hilary, ed.: Madagascar

Jul 1988. 96 pages of color photographs and commentary by leading photographers. Seven Hills Distributors

Internet sources

http://squash/.la.psu.edu/~plarson/homepages.html

"Antananarivo," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001

http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation.

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