The Park is
considered a paradise for researchers and explorers of grottoes and caves and
is the home to 140 families, 427 branches, and 751 species of precious plants
Phong Nha - Ke
Bang is a national park in the center of Quang Binh province in north-central
Vietnam. It protects one of the world's two largest karst regions with several
hundred caves and grottoes. Its name derives from Phong Nha cave, the most
beautiful one, with numerous fascinating rock formations, and Ke Bang forest.
The plateau is probably one of the finest and most distinctive examples of a
complex karst landform in Southeast Asia.
Location:
Geographically,
the Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park (PNKBNP) is located in central Vietnam,
about 500km south of the capital, Hanoi, within the Quang Binh Province.
The western
boundary of the Park partially forms Laos-Vietnamese border, which is only 42km
from the sea. The Park is found within the geographical co-ordinates of 170
20'-170 48' N and 1050 46-1060 24' E in Bo Trach and Minh Hoa Districts.
Recognition by
UNESCO in 2003
Phong Nha-Ke
Bang National Park was first nominated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1998.
The dossier submited to UNESCO was for the recognition of Phong Nha nature
reserve as a world natural heritage under the name “Phong Nha Nature Reserve”.
The reason given for the nomination was that this nature reserve satisfied the
criteria of biodiversity, unique beauty and geodiversity (criteria I and iv).
It was
recognized as a world natural heritage site at the UNESCO's 27th general
assembly session being held in Paris in June 30th – July 5th, 2003. At the
session, delegates from over 160 member countries of UNESCO World Heritage
Convention agreed to include Phong Nha-Ke Bang park and 30 others worldwide in
the list of world heritage sites. Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park meets with
criteria viiii in accordance with UNESCO’s appraisal scale since it displays an
impressive amount of evidence of earth’s history and is a site of importance
for increasing human understanding of the geologic, geomorphic and
geo-chronological history of the region.
Physical
features:
Criterion
(viii): Phong Nha is part of a larger dissected plateau, which also encompasses
the Ke Bang and Hin Namno karsts. The limestone incontinuously demonstrates the
complexity interbedding with shales and sandstones. This, together with the
capping of schists and apparent granites has led to a particularly distinctive
topography.
Looking into the
caves, you may recognize discrete episodic sequences of events, leaving behind
various levels of fossil passages, formerly buried and now uncovered
palaeokarst (karst from previous, perhaps very ancient, periods of solution);
evidence of major changes in the routes of underground rivers; changes in the
solutional regime; deposition and later re-solution of giant speleothems and
unusual features such as sub-aerial stromatolites. The location and form of the
caves suggest that they might owe much of their size and morphology to some as
yet undetermined implications of the schists and granites which overlay the
limestone. On the surface, there is a striking series of landscapes, ranging
from deeply dissected ranges and plateaux to an immense polje. There is
evidence of at least one period of hydrothermal activity in the evolution of
this ancient mature karst system. The plateau is probably one of the finest and
most distinctive examples of a complex karst landform in SE Asia.
Cultural heritage:
The oldest
evidence of human occupation of the area are Neolithic axe heads and similar
artefacts found in some of the caves. There are some relics of Ham Nghi King, a
final King of the Nguyen dynasty before the French colonial period, at the
Maria Mountain in the north of the Park. Currently the Arem, Ma Coong and Ruc
ethnic groups live in two villages in the core zone of Phong Nha Ke - Bang
National Park. Until 1962 these indigenous people lived in the forest in houses
made of bamboo and leaves or in the caves, living from forest products and
hunting. They used simple tools and their clothes were made from the bark of a
toxic forest tree (Antiaris toxicaria) and lianas.
Since 1992 the
Government of Vietnam has set up two new settlements for these 475 people, who
are the two smallest ethnic groups in Vietnam. These people are familiar with a
number of economically valuable species, especially precious timber such as Mun
and Hue city (Diospyros spp., Dalbergia rimosa), and oil-extraction from species
such as Tau (Hopea hainanensis) and many medicinal plants. The Phong Nha Cave
has long been a site of religious and touristic importance, with an old Cham
Temple discovered in the cave and it was a site of worship in the ninth and
tenth centuries. During the war with the USA the Phong Nha - Ke Bang forest and
caves were a garrison and weapons store for the Vietnamese army.
Conservation
value:
Phong Nha-Ke
Bang National Park is of high conservation value as one of the largest areas of
intact forest habitat remaining in Vietnam. As part of a continuous forest
block with the neighbouring Him Namno Biodiversity Conservation Area in Laos it
forms one of the largest areas of forest on limestone karst in Indochina. The
presence of tall lowland forest, which is regionally threatened as a habitat
type, in the National Park increases the area's conservation value.
Phong Nha-Ke
Bang, together with Ha Long Bay and Fanxipan of Vietnam, is listed as a
candidate for 7 new world natural wonders vote. As of February 12, 2008 it
ranked 10th in the voting list
In summary,
Phong Nha displays an impressive amount of evidence of earth’s history. It is a
site of very great importance for increasing our understanding of the geologic,
geomorphic and geo-chronological history of the region.
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