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Search resuls for: "Angel Falls"


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Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal safeguards the southern slopes of Mt Everest, the world’s highest peak at 8,849 meters (29,032 feet). Venezuela’s Canaima National Park is home to Angel Falls, the world’s tallest waterfall at 979 meters (3,212 feet). Larger than Delaware and roughly the same size as Wales, Yellowstone was considered huge when it became the world’s first national park in 1872. North AmericaSprawling across nearly half of the world’s largest island, Northeast Greenland National Park is currently the globe’s single largest national park and biggest land-based protected area. Imaginechina Limited/Alamy Stock PhotoDespite being the largest continent, Asia has fallen behind in the race for the world’s largest national parks.
Persons: Venezuela’s, there’s, , Mette Pike Barselajsen, Mercedes, China’s, Martin Harvey, Naukluft, it’s, Claire Christian Organizations: CNN, National, United Nations, Nanu, South America, Colombia Oculta, Simpson, Mercedes Benz G, Imaginechina, Bank, Getty, Conservation, Antarctic & Southern Ocean Coalition, Antarctic Locations: Nepal, Mt, Angel Falls, Angkor, Cambodia, Delaware, Wales, Yellowstone, North America, Greenland, Ittoqqortoormiit, , East Greenland, South, Patagonia, Colombia, Australia, South Australia, Asia, Qinghai Province, Europe, Africa, Africa’s, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Angola, Namibia, Antarctica
As I gripped the sides of the 80-foot chain ladder, I listened to their distressingly human yelps ricochet through the canyon and tried not to look down. I took a ragged breath and waited for further counsel, but he was already zipping up the ladder ahead of me with the quick, jerky motions of a professional. Stepping gingerly onto the first rung, and aware a second ladder followed this one, I reminded myself of what awaited me at the top of the climb: the world’s tallest waterfall, Tugela Falls—or possibly the second-tallest waterfall, after Angel Falls in Venezuela. Turns out, it’s challenging to accurately measure a 3,000-foot chute of water tumbling over a mountainside, so the debate remains open and raucous. But to cajole myself into a motivated state, I mentally crowned Tugela “the tallest.”
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