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Madagascar’s labyrinth of stone

Stone forest Madagascar’s Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park, situated in the Melaky region on the country’s west coast, is home to some of the world’s most diverse wildlife. On an African island famous for its biodiversity (90% of the species in Madagascar are found nowhere else on Earth), the largely unexplored park is an island unto itself, a kind of bio-fortress that is nearly impenetrable thanks to the massive limestone formation that runs through it. (Stephen Alvarez/National Geographic Stock) Endemic species The park’s great block of Jurassic stone has dissolved over the millennia into a labyrinth of knife-edged towers, slot canyons and wet caves that ward off humans and harbour a variety of other life. New species such as the leaf-tailed gecko (pictured) are frequently discovered in the Unesco World Heritage site’s isolated habitats. Karst formations The park’s unusual karst formations were formed from porous limestone that was scoured and shaped by rainwater and streams. The exact processes that carved them are complex and rare; only a few similar formations exist outside of Madagascar. Researchers believe that groundwater infiltrated the great limestone beds, creating caves and tunnels as the rock dissolved. The cavities grew and eventually their roofs collapsed, creating line-straight canyons, up to 120m deep and edged by spires of standing rock. Some of these canyons are so tight that a human would have difficulty passing through them. Lemurs The rock formations have become like rows of high-rise apartment buildings, providing shelter to an array of species at each level. At the highest reaches there is little soil and no shelter from the sun. Here temperatures often bake above 30C, and plant and animal life is restricted to creatures that can move between the pinnacles and the canyons. Lemurs like the white-furred Decken's sifaka (pictured) use the rock formations as a kind of highway, leaping from spire to spire as they travel between fruit trees. Lemurs are unique to Madagascar, which is home to more than 30 different species of the furry primates.

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.