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Dear
visitor, we appreciate that you chose Andaman Sea kayak
to make this unique day trip, who surely is one of the biggest
high lights during your stay on Phuket Island.
Phang-Nga Bay belong to the Andaman Sea who in turn belongs
to the mightily Indean Ocean. Ao Phang-Nga( Ao=Thai language
for Bay) has a surface of about 400 km2 and is, thanks to
the heaven , since already 16 years a Thai National Marine
Park. So by this no hotels, no resorts, no bars and no boutiques,
no mass tourism. Only pure nature at its best!
In the bay one will find 42 island and islets. To visit
them all has no sense; all are beautiful but only are few
are real spectacular because of their shape, the outside
stalactites their fantastic caves and lagoons with mangrove
inside.
The island in this amazing bay, which you always see by
flying in or by take off from the International Airport
of Phuket, are a real non-classified world-wonder. Such
a landscape you only can admire at Phang-Nga Bay (the most
beautiful), Krabi and Surat Thani provinces in Thailand,
Guilin in Southern China, Halong Bay (near Da Nang) in Vietnam,
Vieng Vang in Laos and Sarawak on the island of Borneo.
All
these are the remnants of an ancient coral reef system that
once stretched out across the shallow seas of south East
Asia during the Permian Period (appr. 250 million years
ago).
These remnants, the island, that you have seen today are
called "karsts". Vegetation on this marvelous
limestone karsts must be able to withstand desiccation during
dry season, almost a complete lack of soil and severe exposure
to the elements. Animals too, need special adaptation to
live in such a hostile environment.
Rainforests over here, as well as the unique limestone formations
we are talking about, are technically ""tropical
evergreen forests", a remnant of a 160 million years
old forest Eco-system that is much older than the Amazon
in Southern America or the rainforests of Central Africa.
The reason for this are fourfold:
1. The "Sunda Shelf" which
contain South Thailand, the Malay peninsula, Sumatra, Java,
Bali and Borneo, all remained geologically stable on the
equator for tens of millions of years while other continental
masses were shifting on plates, entering different climate
zones in relation to the Earth's poles. Because of this
unusual stability, tropical rainforests existed in
this region during the Tertiary Period, The last
geological era.
2.
Another reason for the antiquity and complexity of this
unique ecosystem is that is was climatically unaffected
by the Ice Ages which altered so much of Eurasia's vegetation.
At a time when much of the world's fresh water was locked
in ice, the Amazon and Africa's Zaire River basin desiccated
and became largely dry-land Savannah rather the rainforest.
South
East Asia had a distinct geographical advantage by not being
at the center of a continental land mass. Composed of thousand
of islands and a narrow peninsula surrounded by water, there
was sufficient moisture and humidity here for rainforests
to continue to flourish.
3.The third factor influencing this region's great biological
diversity is also the result of the Ice Age. During the
Pleistocene Epoch there was times when the sea leve l
was about 180 meters lower than today. This resulted in
wasteland bridges across the shallow Sunda Shelf linking
the Malay peninsula with the great islands of Borneo, Sumatra
and Java (actual Indonesia). This allowed for easy inter
change of species that had evolved in isolation. South East
Asia was thus endowed with unsurpassed biological riches:
hundreds of species of mammals, more than 1,500 species
of birds and well over 1,000 species of reptiles and amphibians.
4. There is yet another interesting
factor affecting this area species diversity. A distinct
biological boundary between the Indo-Chines and Sundiatic
sub-regions is located at the "Isthmus of Kra",
just north of the Khao Sok National Park boundary. Khao
Sok then lies in the transition Zone between the two vast
sub-regions and is by this blessed with species from both
areas. The same effect, but less, but less, we see in the
Phang-Nga area.
The dramatic karst island formations, visible on the tranquil
waters of Phang-Nga Bay,
distinguish the area more than any other topographic feature.
These massive limestone uplifts were once part of an ancient
coral reef system that stretched from China down through
Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and into northern Borneo. This way,
and by knowing that there were earthquakes too, it becomes
very easy to understand that the whole Phang-Nga Bay once
was main land (the actual depth in the middle is only 10
to 15 meters).
At the end of the bay, surrounded by provinces of Krabi
and Phang-Nga, one can see at that main land exactly the
same limestone formations. The only difference is that those
formations there are called "mountains" and on
the by "islands".
Thriving
as living coral communities 225-280 million years ago, they
made up a reef system five times longer than the famous
Australian Great Barrier Reef. Uplifting of the Earth's
crust, combined with constant erosion from fluctuating sea
levels and monsoon rains, have resulted in the actual spectacular
shapes you have seen.
Karst topography is generally honeycombed with extensive
cave systems providing habitat for the millions of bats
which play such a key role in South East Asian rainforest
ecology. Also in Phang-Nga Bay the islands have a lot of
caves, but only a few are going through into the mangrove
lagoons in the few islands which have such a magnificent
other world inside.
Humans too directly benefited from karst cave systems. The
oldest human habitation sites in this part of the world
were found here dating back 50,000 years. Some of the caves
display beautiful pre-historic cave paintings and ancient
burial sites (fi. the famous "Vikings Cave" on
Phi Phi Island).
The plant communities which colonize this karst formations
are specially adapted to limestone, lack of (or very impoverished)
soils and long periods of dryness. Decomposing leaves from
the trees and plants combine with heavy seasonal monsoon
rainfall to produce a slightly acid water which readily
still dissolves the rather weak limestone.
The beautiful stalactites visible both within the caves
and on the other faces of the karsts are a result of this
steady acid water erosion carrying away and depositing calcium
carbonate.
Some parts of this rocky islands are not completely eroded
because they are composed by other and harder sorts of stone.
The f.1. red color one can see is the probe of iron an the
glitter of the quartz so called "Diamond Cave"
shows the existence of other minerals.
Karst formations in Thailand are most pronounced in Krabi,
Phang-Nga and Surat Thani provinces. Phang-Nga and Khao
Sok National Park boast some of the most spectacular
formations of this kind.
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