The
Karoo National Park, founded in 1979, is a wildlife reserve in the isolated Karoo
area of the Western Cape, South Africa near Beaufort West. The area is mostly
semi-desert and is well known for its isolation. The national park is home of
many desert mammals, most notably the Black Eagle and various species of tortoise,
for the park lays claim to having the most of these species of any national park.
Endangered species such as the Black Rhinoceros and Riverine Rabbit have been
successfully resettled here. Many fossils have
been uncovered at both the national park and its surrounding area, of which some
are estimated at almost three-hundred million years old. Most fossils date from
the Mesozoic Era to the Middle Ages in the history of the Earth. During this period,
the area was covered by sea, depositing its sediment atop the dead creatures.
The area then became volcanic and as the sandstone eroded away, it left the conical
and table-shaped mountains that are characteristic of Karoo. Karoo
National Park is also known for its connection with the Quagga Project, a project
run by Reinhold Rau to bring back an animal that looked and acted as much like
the extinct quagga as possible. In 1998, fourteen quagga-like zebras were released
into the park and, in January 2005, the most quagga-like foal was born, with narrower
and fainter stripes in a more limited area of its body. This led Rau to predict
that a full quagga would emerge by the fourth generation of breeding.
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